Talk:Internet generation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Articles for deletion This article was nominated for deletion on 4/8/2006. The result of the discussion was no consensus.

Are there any references for this neologism? --Madchester 07:22, July 11, 2005 (UTC)

Track listing for the MC Lars CD that coined the term [1]. I've yet to see it used online, though I've seen the term used in several magazines, but obviously can't provide a link to them sorry. --80.4.224.6 02:03, 25 July 2005 (UTC)
At any rate, it's bordering on original research and has a strong POV to it. Alphax τεχ 01:00, 19 October 2005 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] Mark for Deletion

Article is heavily flawed, and not based on any proven fact. Also mis-states by saying this generation saw the birth and rise of the internet - the internet was born FAR before this generation - it's rise may have happened during this time, but birth, no way.

  • Delete I'm for the deletion of this article. It has a bunch or pointless information and not enough facts to back up it's statements (the "MySpace generation"?). --AlexJohnc3 My Talk Page 17:07, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
  • Delete This page is total rubbish. Completely unfactual, coining terms denoted by commercial operations and TV (Myspace generation? Ipod Generation? "Loli-boomer"?!). As already stated, everything in this article is already covered.--Mincetro 03:29, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
Comment Should this article go into the AfD's while we vote on it? I don't have much experience with deleting articles, so I just wanted to confirm that. -AlexJohnc3 My Talk Page 19:43, 4 August 2006 (UTC)

Comment See this page's deletion page and continue to discuss there. Keep...except for MyPod I personally DO find this article interesting and informative. But I to agree with alexjohnc3, I've never heard my generation refered to as MyPod, nor have I heard Loli-gen. I HAVE heard of millenials, internet generation, generation D, and most often generation M and Y. As part of this generation, I do believe that this should be kept sans some material. I think that each of these names needs to be supported by something. At least loli-gen had a reference!! ForestAngel 04:35, 18 August 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Add more infomation

More should be added to this article. I'm part of the igeneration myself and use Wiki continuously. It would be great to see some additions. Thank you.

[edit] In need of a major overhaul.

This article is simplistic and a mess. It is folly to classify taste in music for this generation in a Rap/Emo dichotomy. More emphasis should be put on differences from Gen Yers and the technology that has done so much to define iGen. We deserve far better.

I think it's been cleaned up. The neutrality also no longer seems applicable.

[edit] Load of Crap!

Agreed. This article, to put nicely, is a load of crap. The Generation Y and iGeneration articles are telling different stories, yet they basically cover the same article at the moment! This article is also home to heavy stereotyping and out of date information. For instance, the Pop-Rap & R&B scene has lost a lot of popularity since the Early 2000s. The Definition of Emo is also dated to when the fashion also first appeared, and this article seems maybe in a POV of about 2002 or 2003. In need of a major overhaul as it is dated and again to be honest, a load of crap. Boochan 11:30, 30 October 2005 (UTC)
Yes, what about this crap about MySpace generation. This is way too centric and partisan to a single webspace. Plus it might be gone in a few years anways. Needs a major rewriting.
I support this, MySpace and all the rest are just hype words. whats next? Ajax Generation? It doesnt even make sense to call MySpace users a Generation, MySpace is only up for a few years, a whole Generation is something that takes much longer then that.
As the title say this is a load. It sounds like a kid wrote this from his narrow minded point of view. Granted my point of view isn't any better but I do know that this is not accurate one bit. The internet generation did start some time in the 80's and that was the time when hackers were dominant (before kiddie scripting came about). If you want to do an article about myspace, itunes, and all the future money squeez ideas do that in the kiddie scripting generation but as far as the "real" internet generation is concerned there were no ipods, myspace, etc. There were BBS, Hacking, Dial-Up, 1337, Unix, Dos, Window9x, Open Source, and more but, it's not like this new gen with all their fancy expensive gadget's and their ignorance on the internet I don't know what generation that is but it's not the internet generation! --Dvelez1985 00:07, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
Maybe it's just me but this paragraph stinks and I have removed it: "The name "iGeneration" is based on the popular iPod music device, as the majority of iPod owners are members of this generation[10]. The term foregrounds the paradoxical ways in which this generation's idiosyncratic subjectivity and individualism ("I") develop within global capitalism and its technological mediation in a way that both constrains and expands the possibilities for identity-formation, akin to how Michel Foucault points to the relationship between sexuality and discourse in the nineteenth century's generative effects of power." A rather wordy and unwieldy sentence that veers into Original Research, citing that a barely established term is supposedly based around the name of a consumer product? The lowercase 'i' doesnt stand for iPod or individualism or any of that crap, as anyone would notice upon reading this article, it stands for 'internet'. Reads like a factually incorrect amateur-intellectual essay. 3dom 09:18, 1 December 2006 (UTC)
Agree as well. There were a lot of people using Walkmen back in the 80's & 90's, no one calls them WalkGeneration. Terms "iGeneration" and "MySpace Generation" are truly a load of crap and should be removed.

[edit] 9/11 anybody?

As a member of iGeneration, I thought it ought to be said that 9/11 is probably going to wind up being the defining event of our lives. While I know a lot of people will disagree, 9/11 changed everything. It also might be appropriate to mention the effects of such polorizing elections/political culture in the United States right now, in addition to talking about other current events. I know it's hard to guage where this generation is politically, but it would be good to at least mention some life-changing events.

I'm also a member of the iGeneration and i got admit, 9/11 kind of changed everything. It happened while we were still kids (or teens i guess) 9/11 should diffently be put in there.

Well since the terms generation Y and iGeneration apply to those born *outside* the US as well as those inside the US the majority of generation yer's would not experience the political ramifications of 9/11 in any substantial way that would act as the defining feature of the generation. I would hardly call the events that occurred 'lifechanging' to the whole generation, sure it happened but did it directly affect those outside the US as a 'lifechanging' incident. I'm sure since trends of apathy amongst this generation and becoming less 'ideological' and more materialistic and issue orientated society September 11 has little ramifications. The effects of 9/11 will also be offset by the proclamations (within this article) of this generation being more detached and less interested in allegiances to their people and place. This is not my opinion, it's fact, it's on wiki. Nam was defining, Cold war was defining, WW2 was defining not 9/11 unless nothing happens of relative importance in the next 10 years.


___________ In my opinion, what will eventually define the generation line between the internet generation and the next one is if someone was old enough to remember pre-9/11 days. Growing up in a nation where you have seemingly little worries about the outside world in reguards to foreign policy, terrorism and the like is severly different from growing up in a world where fear of attack is thrown about as a daily reminder of the past. That, in addition to the huge effects of the internet that first effected this generation, growing up with it as relatively commonplace also changes much, and serves as a dividing line between this generation and past ones (growing up with the internet mostly in place and booming).

[edit] Pic favor??

What is with this article. It skims through a load of issues that are part of the so called igeneration. Why is it even here?????

heee...

oh, i don't know. (ThirdPlateauDreamer 06:23, 27 November 2005 (UTC))

[edit] What's Next?

What, so the IGen ends in 1995 - what do we call the next lot, anybody????

[edit] Rap and Emo ARE popular as of the mid-2000s

While I, a not-so-proud Gen Yer dislikes rap and emo, they are popular now in the mid-2000s and aside from indie stuff (which doesn't count for much IMO) they define Gen Y the way Grunge, Hair Metal and New Wave define Gen X.

Rap LOSING popularity since the early 2000s? R U kidding me? 2002/2003 is when it hit its current popularity; it was in somewhat of a slump between 1997 and 2001/02 because of Teen Pop. Today rap beats the early 90s in popularity.

2003-2005 are probably the best years rap has seen popularity-wise; the same can't be said for quality though. That's 1987-1993 :)

[edit] Holocaust and WWII references

The Holocaust/WW2 references in this article are either completely out of place or just plain wrong and need to be rewritten and shortened. I'm not insinuating that a POV dispute over the fact that the Holocaust and WW2 were traumatic, terrible events that the generation described in the article will only experience through films, but the mention of Schindler's List et al is entirely unnecessary, as it's obvious the real Holocaust could not have been a formative experience for them, nor could any horrible part of history, I'm not sure why we have to single out certain things. For that matter, this also brings up a fallacy of the article, which is to assume that the lack of personal acquaintance with Holocaust survivors or WW2 veterans is hugely significant to a generation's outlook and furthermore that it's unique to the so-called iGeneration. Honestly, it's not as if such events had great significance for the previous two or three generations (Y, X, and baby boomers) either, although they may have been born very close to them and known people for their entire life who had participated or were victimized. That was the whole idea of the baby boomer/1960s culture-- they weren't defined by such things. The baby boomers born 55 or 60 years ago did not experience WW2 or the Holocaust either except through later stories told by others, or through media, and I suspect most people involved in these events did not talk about them much with their young kids. I'm not sure what the big difference is with regard to the Holocaust/WW2 between someone born in 1950 and someone born in 2000. Any way either of them experiences the things will be indirect. I was born way before this iGeneration (early '80s), and I never personally knew a Holocaust survivor, I learned from Schindler's List and from reading as well.

These people are missing the entire 20th century. Let's not reduce it to specific wars or issues.

I agree, that whole section seemed to be unnecessary and distort the flow of the text. Anyway, I was born in 1980, and also haven't known any holocaust survivor myself, although I met one for a history class in school, once. It was interesting, but the former commentors statement about its effect on world outlook seems justified. 81.232.72.148 01:23, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

[edit] List of famous people

i removed the list of famous people, as it is pointless and too celeb-centric -Fabhcún 23:06, 28 December 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Generation V notice

I just categorized Generation V. I believe that article is synonymous with this or Generation Y. I am however not American and have very little knowledge about this subject so I leave it to you people to determine. Regards, Gardar Rurak 07:55, 14 April 2006 (UTC)

[edit] I support merging into Gen Y

I definitely support redirecting this article to Generation Y. iGeneration is definitely not the more common (see GoogleFight). It is also a copy from the likes of iTunes, iPod, etc., which isn't very appropriate for a term that's supposed to be used by researchers, demographers, etc. (In this regard it's a lot like the term myspace generation.) The fact that it's a neologism from a mass-market product very particular to its time means that it is likely to be short-lived, and will date terribly. In comparison, Generation Y follows the very well-established term Generation X, suggesting it is likely to be more used by those in the field, and for a much longer time.

This article also suffers a lot because it just doesn't receive the attention of the Generation Y article.

El T 12:21, 30 April 2006 (UTC)

I agree in the merger, but i also believe the generation is defined over too larger range to be it genuinely considered a generation where members experienced the same trends. I mean come on, those born in the first year would not have know or used the internet to much later on in life, the 2000 gen of yer's have led i life not knowing a world without internet first hand. I reckon the generation could also habe another neologism, e-generation or @generation but there are nth amount of descriptors we can use to identify the generation, thus the merging of this article is justified as this clearly does not stand alone as a unique subset of the y generation universally recognized, currently there are no real sub divisions in the period of births between 1975-2001 but there should be. From my perspective the fall of communism and the profiliration of ICT resources really defined the generation between 1976-1996 i do not know why it has been extended to 2001 maybe for american convience that 9/11 provided the major defining event not the fall of the berlin wall and the USSR. Cold War vs. Effects of Terrorism only time will tell, but i must admit that anti-communist frontiers are a feature of xer's (vietnam).

[edit] Cleanup notice

Although there was no conclusion to delete the article, it cannot remain the way it currently is. Most times sources are either unstated or not notable. For example, the infamous loli-boom/boomer comes up with few results on a Google query, of which most are unrelated or created by the originator of the term. I therefore marked the article for cleanup. Don Cuan 19:14, 18 October 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Who Comes Up With These Idiotic Year-spans?

Seriously...1985-1999? What idiot decided that? Also, this article assumes that most of us born in this timeframe have no recollection of life without the Internet? Hell, I remember life without Microsoft Windows and I was born in 1987. The Internet didn't become a full-fledged part of mainstream culture (i.e. everyone didn't have Internet access and used it heavily) until the mid-late 1990s (1994 at the very earliest). Meaning that anyone born in the 1980s had to have some recollection of life without the Internet, unless they came from wealthy backgrounds.131.156.238.75 01:53, 24 October 2006 (UTC)

I think this generation should be from 1988 - 1999, and lump the 1985 - 1987 with the Boomerang.

What was the discussion that led to this year-span? This article is very 2000-centric, with the majority of the internet population boom joining in the last 6 years, not to mention numerous references to commercial products that gained popularity this decade. 1999 seems like a ludicrous choice to draw the line. 3dom 09:38, 1 December 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Internet generation?

Internet? Blah! That's funny! Most of my classmates say: "Technology is not my cup of tea." And what's Myspace?