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     Poking, pimping and twittering – new words and online identity by Kerry Maxwell lifestreaming also life  streaming noun  [U] /la ‘Lifestreaming  is an online record - or in Web parlance, feed - of a person's  activities online drawing from their posted content on blogs, social  networks, photo and video sites and more. In short, you do a lot of  stuff all over the Web; lifestreaming lets you aggregate all these  activities and show them to your friends.’ ‘They  are lifestreamers, who have been simulcasting their lives 24 hours a  day. Why? Because it's there.’  ‘Users  are not just sending texts and e-mails, but are "lifecasting"  words and video 24 hours a day. "It's a lifestream of your  activities - both in the real world and online," said Jaiku's  Jyri Engestrom.’  Remember the old adage ‘It’s not what you know, but who you know’? Well, in today’s society, perhaps it should read something more like ‘It’s not what you know, but who you are online’. The convenience and popularity of online journals (blogs), social networking websites, instant messaging, online photo / video and other such media are making the idea of an ‘online identity’ an increasingly prominent concept. And it’s in this context that the new term lifestreaming has emerged. Lifestreaming is the process of creating an online record of your daily activities, both virtual and real, which you can show to your friends. The idea is to draw together all the information you have posted on the web - whether it’s blog entries, photos / video or participation in social networks - and put them in one place to create a lifestream, an aggregated online record of your day-to-day life. People who do this are now dubbed lifestreamers: creators of a daily broadcast of their real or virtual activities. An offshoot is the concept of workstreaming, where the focus is on things you are doing in your professional life, intended for the attention of clients, colleagues and business partners. Though for the older and more sceptical among us this may seem a bit bizarre, (and I must confess - I do wonder who would really be interested in checking out the minutest details of my daily movements!), there is no doubt that online identity is becoming an increasingly important issue in the lives of many people. And of interest here, is that the mechanisms for ‘making our mark’ online have thrown up many new items of vocabulary. A  core concept is social  networking, which  centres on the idea of using the Internet to connect people who share  similar personal / professional interests, or perhaps have something  else in common, like geographical location or educational  institutions previously attended. There’s been an explosion of  popularity in social  networking websites,  within which people are connected as a database of friends, friends  of friends, and so on. Among the most well-known examples is  Facebook® which,  with more than 60 million members, represents one of the world’s  most visited websites. Its popularity as a contemporary means of  communication has led to the word facebook - originally  just a noun referring to a printed booklet of college members - being  used as a verb, as in I facebooked her last night. Facebook the  verb essentially has two meanings, one simply being ‘to communicate  with someone using the Facebook® website’,  and the other taking inspiration from new verb Google™ to  mean something like ‘to search for information about someone using  Facebook®.  The former sense also occurs ditransitively (i.e. with both a direct  and an indirect object) as in e.g. I facebooked her a message last night. Even more interesting from a neologist’s point of view is that Facebook® users have attached very new and specific senses to familiar items of vocabulary. For example, within the pages of Facebook®, the word poke is used both as a verb and a noun to indicate that you want to get someone’s attention. By poking someone or sending them a poke, you’re giving them a kind of virtual nudge. Whilst many users interpret the poke feature as an innocent mechanism for saying hello, a significant number have construed it as a kind of sexual advance - so much so that the word poke and related forms (poker, poking) are emerging innuendoes. An embellishment of the poke concept is the SuperPoke! feature, which enables users to substitute the word poke with other action words expressing how they want to interact with someone, such as a hug, slap and, well, I’ll leave it to your imagination! Each  Facebook® user  has a profile, a  dedicated web page containing information about them which they  control and maintain. Among the key components of the profile is what  is referred to as the wall,  a space on the page which allows friends to post messages for the  user (and his / her friends) to see. Other commonly used terms are gifts, virtual  presents in the form of small novelty icons, and the news  feed, a  constantly updated list which shows users what their friends have  been doing on Facebook® and  highlights information such as profile changes, birthdays and other  forthcoming events. Another common activity is tagging, where  users allocate short electronic labels to photos in order to help  others find them more easily in the future. Users  can make their profile look more attractive by adding photos,  graphics, music etc. This activity is referred to as pimping your  profile, and in contrast to poking,  has no sexual overtones. The use of pimp in  this sense is likely have taken inspiration from African American  English, in which pimping something,  especially a vehicle, refers to modifying and embellishing it in a  very individual way. The standard sense of pimp recorded  in most English dictionaries relates to managing prostitutes, but in  fact one theory about the word’s origins suggests a closer link  with this newer sense: pimp could  be based on the 16th century French pimper, meaning  ‘to dress elegantly’. Outside  the world of Facebook® there  are other mechanisms for virtual socializing that are making their  mark on the English language. If a website captures people’s  imagination so significantly that they begin to exploit it on a daily  basis, then it seems as if its name has the potential to become a  verb. One such example is YouTube™, the  video sharing website where users can upload, view and share video  clips. Though the site itself is only a mere three years old, its  name has morphed into a verb which is in regular use in spoken  English and across the Internet. YouTube the  verb seems to have two interpretations based on whether video  material is being placed on the site, or watched there. It’s now,  for example, possible to say things like: I  saw this while I was YouTubing [my  friend’s wedding]. A  common use is in the passive (i.e. be  / get YouTubed),  as shown for example in the following recent citation from America’s  CBS News discussing presidential campaigns: … Any given day, a candidate can say one word and it gets YouTubed and his campaign's done …   In  exactly the same vein, though perhaps not quite so widely recognized,  the photo sharing website Flickr™  has  also given us a new verb, so that if photos are / get Flickred, they  get posted on to the Flickr™ site,  and the activity of putting your photos on the site is known as Flickring. Of  course the names of many websites take inspiration from established  word senses, and so there’s then a sort of circular relationship  between the original use of the word and its new, Internet-based  sense.  Take, for example, the verb twitter, one  sense of which is defined in MED as ‘to talk a lot about  unimportant things’. This informal use inspired the naming of the  website Twitter, a  social networking service launched in 2006 that allows users to send  each other short messages of up to 140 characters long. In no time at  all, regular users of Twitter established  a new verb twitter meaning  ‘to spend time talking to someone using Twitter’. One expectant father’s live account of his daughter’s birth illustrates the use. Of  course the other common use of the verb twitter refers  specifically to birds when they make a high-pitched singing sound.  Taking inspiration from the related noun, a tweet in  the virtual universe is not bird song but a text-based post in  Twitter. For  some examples of tweets, check  out this article from a BBC  News blog,  where an employee is twittering to  others in  his final hours before leaving a job! For more information about new and topical words and phrases, read Kerry's Word of the Week articles on the MED Resource Site.  | 
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