Difference between revisions of "Virtual Community"
Insightful (talk | contribs) |
Insightful (talk | contribs) |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
==Enablers:== | ==Enablers:== | ||
- Basic Needs for Communication and Relationship | |||
- Saving money and time | |||
- supporting by e-business companies | |||
==Inhibitors:== | ==Inhibitors:== | ||
- ethical or legal crime under cover of a false name | |||
- escape from reality | |||
==Paradigms:== | ==Paradigms:== |
Latest revision as of 06:03, 20 July 2006
Description:
- Virtual community is any place groups of people talk together on the Internet; in mailing lists, in newsgroups, in chat rooms, or on Web sites. Virtual community can also cover more specialized situations, such as long-distance education or shared project work spaces. And it can describe some communications that aren't discussions, such as posting customer evaluations or answering opinion polls. Whenever people are aware of each other's presence on the Internet, they're likely to consider themselves part of a community.
- Cyber community
Enablers:
- Basic Needs for Communication and Relationship
- Saving money and time
- supporting by e-business companies
Inhibitors:
- ethical or legal crime under cover of a false name
- escape from reality
Paradigms:
- Before : Community means interaction and relationship in physically limited space.
- After : If you had something to be interested in, it is possible to make a community with anyone regardless of time or place.
Experts:
-Howard Rheingold : The virtual community : homesteading on the electronic frontier(2000)
-Judith S.Donath