What HCIers talk about
The scene: A smoky bar around 1:00am on a Friday. The people: A bunch of HCI grad students. A question is posed: "Is is appropriate to ask someone out over email?"Most nod. Rationale: Of course in this technologically enlightened age it's totally fine to approach someone in the face-saving medium of email. Oh, but one person vehemently disagreed. Perhaps he's more of a gentleman than the rest of us, but perhaps he's just crazy.
Not content to leave it at that, the HCIers decided only one venue could settle the argument: SurveyMonkey. But then, they couldn't agree on the way the question should be phrased (do we need a Likert scale?), so the survey never went up.
So, if you are in an incipient relationship with someone in HCI with ambiguous computer-mediated communication, well, now you know why.
Comments
you can totally ask someone out whatever way you choose. i, however, feel that while certain situations (such as distance) may preclude a face to face interaction, you are missing out on much the fun of dating when you remove yourself from the emotional experience by using an electronically mediated method such as im or email.
i totally get where you're going with the phone, but i would argue that it is real time and largely unrehearsed which preserves some of the spontinaity and uncertainty that makes life less boring. still face to face is the way to go.
here's my scale:
awesome <----------------> lame
f2f --> phone --> im --> email
I totally concede that your scale is self-consistent and consistent with the idea that what makes asking someone out exciting is the spontaneity of it or whatever; I think I happen to like the slowly-consideredness of email better, and in fact I think my scale of preference is precisely yours reversed. Anyhow neither one of us is being naively pro- or anti-technology per se.
I think an actual paper letter, almost purely for the amusing hyperbole of it, would be even better.
My personal experience is that a lot of the important cues get lost when there isn't face to face or at least over the phone interaction which makes it much harder to gauge things about the other party. E.g. their level of interest, sanity, etc. In extreme cases it's like Harry says in the Harry and the Potters song The Human Hosepipe: "...I'd rather not talk about your dead ex-boyfriends over coffee" (Yes, there is a small indie band that plays Harry Potter inspired music)
Hmm... I'm not entirely sure that I'm adding to the conversation here, but I did get to say "kafkaesque online dating experiences", which makes me happy. ;)
"Hey, I kinda meant to ask you out on a date last night... Anyways, I'm not gonna do that via email because that's
lame." (Bold print mine.)
This is the first time my romantic relationship has not furthered through IM. And I am so. glad.
Hm. Not so long ago, I received an email from a certain software developer, and it said this:
"Hey, I kinda meant to ask you out on a date last night... Anyways, I'm not gonna do that via email because that's lame." (Bold print mine.)
This is the first time that a romantic relationship that I am in has not been furthered through IM. And I am so. glad.
And let me say this :
The medium is the message.
(Thank you, Marshall McLuhan.)
Every relationship (but one) I've had was initiated rather more smoothly, via long email and zephyr exchanges, frequent hanging out in large groups, chatting during hikes, then carpooling to events, eventually having dinner together, eventually hiking alone together; and finally, when the general awkwardness builds to intolerable levels, the awkwardness of starting the Chat (or, perhaps, the Making Out) is overcome and it is had.
For reasons dictated by our low-tech society, the Making Out is never over electronic media.
maybe not making out, but third base and beyond is thanks to teledildonics.