Yes, I use my cell-phone to send e-mails, if I am away from my PC
Carol
-----Original Message-----
From: Karen Lunsford [mailto:klunsford@writing.ucsb.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, February 03, 2004 2:04 AM
To: xmca@weber.ucsd.edu; Eugene Matusov
Cc: 'Dusty Twister'; 'Jabulani Mashinini'; Kelebogile Setiloane (Kelebogile
Setiloane); Kiki Setiloane; PIG
Subject: Re: FW: [UD-PIG] Cellphone literature
Hi Eugene (and everyone),
Several researchers from the Association of Internet Researchers have been
interested in this phenomenon. It's an example of a "leap-frog" technology:
cell phones and wireless technologies have allowed several regions to bypass
the expense of trying to wire everything for desk-bound computers. If you'd
like to read more about the AoIR and its listserv and conference, the main
page can be found at http://aoir.org/
Best,
Karen
Quoting Eugene Matusov <ematusov@udel.edu>:
> Dear everybody-
>
> When I visited South Africa (and Russia to a lesser extend) I found myself
> Cellphone illiterate - people sent me messages (a lot of jokes but even
> poetry sometimes) that I had trouble to read and I could not reply.
> Cellphone literacy seems a phenomenon less known in US because people here
> use email more than cellphone messages. I wish I saved messages to me from
> local people in South Africa and Russia. Sometimes it took me hours to
> understand the messages while local people could read them fluently. I
> wonder how instant messaging is similar and different to cellphone
literacy.
> I think literacy researchers should focus on this interesting new
> phenomenon.
>
> What do you think?
>
> Eugene
-- Karen Lunsford, Assistant Professor of Writing Writing Program University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara, CA 93106-3010 klunsford@writing.ucsb.edu 805-893-8556
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