Online Chat

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For terms frequently used in online keyboard chatting, see chat acronyms/IRC/BBS.

On the Internet, chatting is talking to other people who are using the Internet at the same time you are. Usually, this "talking" is the exchange of typed-in messages requiring one site as the repository for the messages (or "chat site") and a group of users who take part from anywhere on the Internet. In some cases, a private chat can be arranged between two parties who meet initially in
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a group chat. Chats can be ongoing or scheduled for a particular time and duration. Most chats are focused on a particular topic of interest and some involve guest experts or famous people who "talk" to anyone joining the chat. (Transcripts of a chat can be archived for later reference.) Chats are conducted on online services (especially America Online), by bulletin board services, and by Web sites. Several Web sites, notably Talk City, exist solely for the purpose of conducting chats. Some chat sites such as Worlds Chat allow participants to assume the role or appearance of an avatar in a simulated or virtual reality environment. Talk City and many other chat sites use a protocol called Internet Relay Chat. A chat can also be conducted using sound or sound and video, assuming you have the bandwidth access and the appropriate programming.

Online chat
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Online chat may refer to any kind of communication over the Internet, that offers an instantaneous transmission of text-based messages from sender to receiver, hence the delay for visual access to the sent message shall not hamper the flow of communications in any of the directions. Online chat may address as well point-to-point communications as well as multicast communications from one sender to many receivers.

Contents
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1 Instrumentation 2 History 3 Chatiquette 4 Cultural impact 5 Social criticism 6 Software and protocols 7 See also 8 References

[edit] Instrumentation
Online chat in a lesser stringent definition may be primarily any direct text-based one-on-one chat or one-to-many group chat (formally also known as synchronous conferencing), using tools such as instant messengers, Internet Relay Chat, talkers and possibly MUDs. The expression online chat comes from the word chat which means "informal conversation".

[edit] History
The first[1] dedicated online chat service was the CompuServe CB Simulator in 1980,[2] created by CompuServe executive Alexander "Sandy" Trevor in Columbus, Ohio. Ancestors include network chat software such as UNIX "talk" used in the 1970s.

[edit] Chatiquette
The term chatiquette is a variation of netiquette (chat etiquette) and describes basic rules of online communication.[3][4][5][6] To avoid misunderstandings and to simplify the communication between users in a chat these conventions or guidelines have been created. Chatiquette varies from community to community, generally describing basic courtesy; it introduces new user into the community and the associated network culture. As an example, it is considered rude to write only in upper case, because it looks as if the user is shouting. The word chatiquette has been used in connection with various chat systems (e.g. IRC) since 1995.[7][8]

[edit] Cultural impact


Despite being virtual, chat can spill into the outside world.[9] There can also be a strong sense of online identity leading to impression of subculture.[10] Compare Internet sociology. Chats are valuable sources of various types of information, the automatic processing of which is the object of chat/text mining technologies.[11]

[edit] Social criticism


This section may contain original research. Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding references. Statements consisting only of original research may be removed. More details may be available on the talk page. (May 2010) There has been much criticism about what online chatting has done in todays society. Many people[who?] are accusing it of replacing proper English with short hand with an almost completely new hybrid language.[citation needed] Writing is changing as it takes on some of the functions and features of speech. Internet chatrooms and rapid real-time conferencing allow users to interact with whoever happens to coexist in cyberspace. These virtual interactions involve us in `talking' more freely and more widely than ever before (Merchant, 2001).[12] With chatrooms replacing many face-to-face conversations it is necessary to be able to have quick conversation as if the person were present, so many people learn to type as quickly as they would normally speak. Critics[who?] are wary that this casual form of speech is being used so much that it will slowly take over common grammar; however, such a change has yet to be seen. With the increasing population of online chatrooms there has been a massive growth[citation needed] of new words created or slang words, many of them documented on the website Urban Dictionary Sven Birkerts says as new electronic modes of communication provoke similar anxieties amongst critics who express concern that young people are at risk, endangered by a rising tide of information over

which the traditional controls of print media and the guardians of knowledge have no control on it.[13] This person is arguing that the youth of the world may have too much freedom with what they can do or say with the almost endless possibilities that the Internet gives them, and without proper controlling it could very easily get out of hand and change the norm of literacy of the world. In Guy Merchants journal article Teenagers in Cyberspace: An Investigation of Language Use and Language Change in Internet Chatrooms; he says that teenagers and young people are in the leading the movement of change as they take advantage of the possibilities of digital technology, drastically changing the face of literacy in a variety of media through their uses of mobile phone text messages, e-mails, web-pages and online chatrooms. This new literacy develops skills that may well be important to the labor market but are currently viewed with suspicion in the media and by educationalists.[who?] [14] Merchant also says Younger people tend to be more adaptable than other sectors of society and, in general, quicker to adapt to new technology. To some extent they are the innovators, the forces of change in the new communication landscape. (Merchant, 2001).[15] In this article he is saying that young people are merely adapting to what they were given.

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