It's happening even faster. My kids, in their mid to late 30s, don't use email 
at all. It's all quick, instant gratification type communications, like texts 
or their internet-type ilk. Almost none of their friends uses email anymore.

Regards,
Charlie
480.505.8800 x4123

-----Original Message-----
From: Gnupg-users [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Robert J. 
Hansen
Sent: Friday, April 11, 2014 11:47 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: It's 2014. Are we there yet?

> I'll have to disagree. I think there's a growing sense of "uhhh...maybe 
> these email providers are not such a good idea after all".

In 2007-8 (the last time I taught undergrad Computer Literacy), over a third of 
my students only used email for university business (like submitting papers to 
me) and talking to their older relatives.  Among their own age bracket, most 
communication was done through Facebook.
(Today it's more Instagram and Snapchat and the percentage is approaching 50%, 
according to my friends who are still teaching.)

But yes, email really is on the way out as a communications medium.  The 
younger generation sees it as an antiquated technology.  I suspect in another 
20 years it'll be used about as much as Gopher is today.


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