Tom Krieglstein on 2009-07-17
Where does it talk about how he did this study, or actual quanitative numbers from the study?
This link has been bookmarked by 43 people . It was first bookmarked on 13 Jul 2009, by Wayne Barry.
Nothing all that ground-breaking for people familiar with web 2.0 and teens, except that it very simply tells adults that teens do not buy into their systems.
The research note written by a 15-year-old Morgan Stanley intern that dismisses Twitter and traditional media sources
This is the full copy of the research note written by Matthew Robson (aged 15 years and seven months), an intern at Morgan Stanley, which caused a stir after it was published by the bank
technology media news research Twitter guardian.co.uk Guardian teenagers habit online learners digitalimmigrant web2.0 elearning NTUEDU
A 15yr old intern at Morgan Stanley did a study of teens with some expected results but laid out all at once for people to see (but often times it seems like his own opinion)
study research data teens technology trends MorganStanley internet cellphones music games radio newspaper tv

Tom Krieglstein on 2009-07-17
Where does it talk about how he did this study, or actual quanitative numbers from the study?

Tom Krieglstein on 2009-07-17
Doesn't this just sound like his opinion (thouh I'm sure it's true) is not very scientific.
Features such as video messaging or video calling are not used –because they are expensive,
The research note written by a 15-year-old Morgan Stanley intern that dismisses Twitter and traditional media sources
This is the full copy of the research note written by Matthew Robson (aged 15 years and seven months), an intern at Morgan Stanley, which caused a stir after it was published by the bank
What is not? (hot, that is!)
• Anything with wires
This is the full copy of the research note written by Matthew Robson (aged 15 years and seven months), an intern at Morgan Stanley, which caused a stir after it was published by the bank
The research note written by a 15-year-old Morgan Stanley intern that dismisses Twitter and traditional media sources
Morgan Stanley Media business Twitter Technology UK news Business
Most teenagers nowadays are not regular listeners to radio. They may occasionally tune in, but they do not try to listen to a program specifically. The main reason teenagers listen to the radio is for music, but now with online sites streaming music for free they do not bother, as services such as last.fm do this advert free, and users can choose the songs they want instead of listening to what the radio presenter/DJ chooses.
social media digital divide digital natives media technology digital
Public Stiky Notes
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.