EUGENE, Ore. — A new University of Oregon study found that the language teen girls use in text messages and social media apps, like TikTok and Snapchat, is linked to day-to-day changes in their moods.
James is a published author with multiple pop-history and science books to his name. He specializes in history, strange science, and anything out of the ordinary.View full profile James is a published ...
In text messages from 2022, former Virginia House Delegate Jay Jones mused about hypothetically shooting then-Republican ...
English teacher Carrie Beth Buchanan sees the effects of students’ growing up in an age when communication is done in an abbreviated text language and where they depend on autocorrect to automatically ...
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“How am I even supposed to respond to this?” My friend shows me her phone screen, where her dad has replied to a long, complicated, logistic-filled text message with a simple “Ok 👍.” We’ve all been ...
How would you respond if this text pops up on your phone? Tomorrow, EMBM — miss AYOR!!! Could be trouble if you skip, but IANAL. LOL!!!! If you got all of that — GRATZ! — you’re certifiably text ...
Regular readers of this column will know that I am suspicious of cyberspace innovations — from Facebook to MySpace to Second Life — that substitute the accumulation of “friends” for actual friendship, ...