What's in a name.
From as early as Biblical times naming has been a means of establishing
dominion. When we name something we define it, and we define our relationship
toward it. But today naming is much more than "just" that. A catchy
name is what can convert a bland and not particularly interesting observation
into a marketable phenomenon.
And so it is with something like what would appear to be a perfectly logical and
not particularly significant response to using e-mail. Without a catchy name it's
pretty ho-hum, but call it Pre and Post Mail Tension, and you're
really onto something - probably lots of talk radio programs and some morning
television. I don't have any inside information on this, and certainly no way
of verifying such a claim, but I'd venture to guess that at one point or another
more than a handful of researchers have said to themselves:
hmmm. It seems that lots of people seem tense when
they send e-mail
but left it at that. It took someone with
a keen marketing sense, and a feel for names, to
turn such an obvious, and obviously trivial, observation into a headline grabber.
Go to: Down
and Out from E-mail.