Most of us are using the internet and our phones a lot more these days. According to Cloudflare -- who recently published these stats on how the pandemic has impacted internet usage -- traffic is up about 36% in Toronto between early January and late March 2020. Here is a heatmap of the city:

Similar maps are available for other major cities across the world. The red areas are places where internet traffic has declined and the green areas are where internet traffic has increased. Looking at Toronto, you can see that usage in the financial core of the city has, not surprisingly, declined. This makes sense. Most people are now at home using the internet there.
It would be interesting to see some sort of split between residential and commercial usage, because my mind is associating these red areas with businesses. And when you do that, some cities, like Toronto and New York, appear very monocentric; whereas others, like Berlin, appear far more polycentric.

The other thing Cloudfare looked at was internet activity by category (as of March 2020). What is also not surprising is that kids content is way up, and leads by a wide margin. For you real estate folks, you should also note that apartment searches seem to be down and are not far off from air travel. Now would be a suboptimal time to move.

Much of this probably won't surprise you, but it is revealing nonetheless.
In 1956, Donald Horton and Richard Wohl coined the term parasocial interaction to describe the psychological relationship that people were starting to have with TV personalities. Though radio had already started this phenomenon, the television brought with it an entirely new dimension. People started to really feel as if they knew that person on TV. They had become a friend.
But as Christopher Mims points out in this recent article about loneliness during the coronavirus pandemic, the problem with parasocial interaction is that it's entirely one-sided. It also isn't real: "Sitting around the house watching television, parasocializing with our favorite news anchors or sitcom characters, didn’t confer the same benefits as socializing with real people."
The internet has further enhanced the way we parasocialize. Similar to how TV built on radio, the internet has built on TV. Instead of just scripted television shows, we now have Instagram Stories, TikTok videos, inappropriate Snaps, and many other methods of communication, some of which are maybe a little less scripted.
Of course, we also see our real friends online and those people we know, but never actually spend time with, maintaining only a loose "relationship" via the occasional emoji reaction. Mims argues that this has created a new kind of "mental equivalence." It has become harder for our minds to distinguish between our real friends and our parasocial friends.
Recently, we have all become familiar with terms like "flatten the curve" and "social distancing." But what is clear as we all start isolating ourselves at home -- whether mostly or entirely -- is this: it sucks. Even with all of the tech and social media that we now have available to us, we cannot replace what it's like to give someone a hung, look them in the eyes, and have a meaningful conversation.
That said, the Italians seem to have really mastered this whole self-isolation thing with their balcony orchestras and internet videos like this one here:
https://twitter.com/JamesAALongman/status/1239153242279460864?s=20
Stay strong, friends. Normalcy will return.
Yesterday, Jack Dorsey published the below tweetstorm about Twitter's efforts to create a decentralized internet protocol for social media. What does this mean? Think along the lines of the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (or SMTP). Some, or many, of you may not know what this is, but you almost certainly use it every day. It is fundamental to modern email communication. It is how emails get sent.
https://twitter.com/jack/status/1204766078468911106?s=20
I would encourage you to click through to the entire thread. It all feels very topical. We are living in a world of recommendation algorithms and content designed to "spark controversy and outrage." Arguably, this is the result of social media companies being platforms (i.e. proprietary systems), as opposed to being based around open protocols. Twitter is trying to change that by funding a team. And that feels like a great -- and timely -- idea.
Full disclosure: I own $TWTR.
Most of us are using the internet and our phones a lot more these days. According to Cloudflare -- who recently published these stats on how the pandemic has impacted internet usage -- traffic is up about 36% in Toronto between early January and late March 2020. Here is a heatmap of the city:

Similar maps are available for other major cities across the world. The red areas are places where internet traffic has declined and the green areas are where internet traffic has increased. Looking at Toronto, you can see that usage in the financial core of the city has, not surprisingly, declined. This makes sense. Most people are now at home using the internet there.
It would be interesting to see some sort of split between residential and commercial usage, because my mind is associating these red areas with businesses. And when you do that, some cities, like Toronto and New York, appear very monocentric; whereas others, like Berlin, appear far more polycentric.

The other thing Cloudfare looked at was internet activity by category (as of March 2020). What is also not surprising is that kids content is way up, and leads by a wide margin. For you real estate folks, you should also note that apartment searches seem to be down and are not far off from air travel. Now would be a suboptimal time to move.

Much of this probably won't surprise you, but it is revealing nonetheless.
In 1956, Donald Horton and Richard Wohl coined the term parasocial interaction to describe the psychological relationship that people were starting to have with TV personalities. Though radio had already started this phenomenon, the television brought with it an entirely new dimension. People started to really feel as if they knew that person on TV. They had become a friend.
But as Christopher Mims points out in this recent article about loneliness during the coronavirus pandemic, the problem with parasocial interaction is that it's entirely one-sided. It also isn't real: "Sitting around the house watching television, parasocializing with our favorite news anchors or sitcom characters, didn’t confer the same benefits as socializing with real people."
The internet has further enhanced the way we parasocialize. Similar to how TV built on radio, the internet has built on TV. Instead of just scripted television shows, we now have Instagram Stories, TikTok videos, inappropriate Snaps, and many other methods of communication, some of which are maybe a little less scripted.
Of course, we also see our real friends online and those people we know, but never actually spend time with, maintaining only a loose "relationship" via the occasional emoji reaction. Mims argues that this has created a new kind of "mental equivalence." It has become harder for our minds to distinguish between our real friends and our parasocial friends.
Recently, we have all become familiar with terms like "flatten the curve" and "social distancing." But what is clear as we all start isolating ourselves at home -- whether mostly or entirely -- is this: it sucks. Even with all of the tech and social media that we now have available to us, we cannot replace what it's like to give someone a hung, look them in the eyes, and have a meaningful conversation.
That said, the Italians seem to have really mastered this whole self-isolation thing with their balcony orchestras and internet videos like this one here:
https://twitter.com/JamesAALongman/status/1239153242279460864?s=20
Stay strong, friends. Normalcy will return.
Yesterday, Jack Dorsey published the below tweetstorm about Twitter's efforts to create a decentralized internet protocol for social media. What does this mean? Think along the lines of the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (or SMTP). Some, or many, of you may not know what this is, but you almost certainly use it every day. It is fundamental to modern email communication. It is how emails get sent.
https://twitter.com/jack/status/1204766078468911106?s=20
I would encourage you to click through to the entire thread. It all feels very topical. We are living in a world of recommendation algorithms and content designed to "spark controversy and outrage." Arguably, this is the result of social media companies being platforms (i.e. proprietary systems), as opposed to being based around open protocols. Twitter is trying to change that by funding a team. And that feels like a great -- and timely -- idea.
Full disclosure: I own $TWTR.
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