A few years ago I attended a seminar on marketing & it was the opinion of 
the speaker that the computer had changed our perception of timing ... the 
click of the mouse has dictated the speed of the response we seek. I believe 
he talked of response times aroud 5-7 seconds as being what his surveys had 
indicated as being acceptable, especially with the younger computer users.

Kenneth Waller
http://www.tinyurl.com/272u2f

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bong Manayon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Short Attention Spans (was Re: Pentax Photo Gallery Statistics)


>I agree...and its not really confined to photos, wine or the American
> culture either. I'm going through a book by Richard Lanham (Economics
> of Attention, Univ of Chicago Press) where in the IT age, the
> commodity is not information (we have too much of it) but attention.
> So whether in the media, politics or religion, "truth" may ultimately
> be defined by those who can get or control people's attention...
>
> ...and the new priesthood is Google (if it is not yet the god of this 
> age)...
>
> On Sat, Mar 1, 2008 at 11:40 AM, Mark Erickson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> wrote:
>> Bruce,
>>
>>  This larger trend is also reflected in the U.S. wine industry.  The 
>> "Robert
>>  Parker" scale is really to blame.  Parker tastes zillions of wines each
>>  year, so each wine has just a few seconds to make an impression.  If it 
>> is
>>  subtle rather than big, and not "hot" (high in alcohol), it doesn't get 
>> a
>>  high (90+) score.  I think that photo.net has exactly the same problem.
>>  Delicate, subtle images just don't have a big immediate impact, so they 
>> get
>>  overlooked.
>>
>>  Probably comes with the short attention span endemic to American culture
>>  these days, too....
>>
>>  --Mark
>>
>>
>>  Bruce Dayton wrote:
>>  >
>>  > [cut, snip]
>>  >
>>  >In some respects, this seems to be following a larger trend.  One in
>>  >which art is transcending photography.  Try looking at all the photos
>>  >on photo.net galleries based on popularity.  Almost all the shots are
>>  >soooo dramatic that they just don't hardly look like our planet -
>>  >even people shots have heavy doctoring of lighting.  Extreme skies
>>  >and wild, saturated colors are the norm these days - even though
>>  >where I live, I see that kind of thing maybe once every few years.  I
>>  >seem to be rambling...must be one of those days.
>>  >Bruce
>>
>>
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>
>
>
> -- 
> Bong Manayon
> http://www.bong.uni.cc
>
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