Aaron Buckley wrote:
I definitely know I'm the exception to the rule, but I see my wife on it about 2 hours every night and realize that it'll never be something I'm interested in. - AB
FB can be as little or as much as you want to make it. For example, even if the club *did* want to make FB *the* official way to notify people of event information, all you'd have to do is create an account with a fictional name (so you don't have to worry about all us other "friends" of yours finding you and sending you friend requests) and then you "Like" the club page and setup notifications via email for updates to it. Bam, you don't even have to log in to your FB account and you'll get the updates right to your inbox.
Or you could join with your real name, and do like I do (or go bigger) and just don't accept friend requests from people just because you *know* them. My apologies to the few of you I "know" via TH but aren't really friends with, but that's why I didn't accept your request. I don't want to know what you're doing all day, and don't really care for you to know what I'm doing all day.
I've got a few family members that joined and hardly ever post or do much with it, but they can at least log in and see pictures and such easily when we've got the kids on vacation and the like. It's useful for a lot of things without you needing to get "sucked in" or whatever.
I actually find that family get-togethers (you know, those ones that you CAN'T get out of) are much more enjoyable thanks to FB. Why? Because it makes it easy to scan beforehand and find a few things you can actually talk to people about that might be more interesting than the usual idle chit-chat that goes on. And heck, you can "hide" those people the rest of the year (and they don't even know it) and not care what they're doing then.
Just my FB rant against those who say "I just don't want to spend hours on something like that."
--Donnie