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'BFD' has long way to go to be next LOL
Jul 6, 4:43 pm
Washington, July 6 (ANI): While abbreviations like LOL or OMG have been common Internet lingo, BFD, which clearly stands for "Big Fucking Deal," has been making the rounds on Twitter lately. However, the term casts doubt as to how long it will stick around.Scholars are still working out why some abbreviations fizzle while others make a transition from insiders' jargon to broad acceptance. Linguist Allan Metcalf has developed a handy scale to forecast a neologism's chances of becoming a long-term part of the language. He assigns the expression a score of 0, 1, or 2 in each of five categories: frequency of use, unobtrusiveness, diversity of users, ability to generate related neologisms, and endurance of the concept it describes. (The chat room favourite RTFM-read the fucking manual-has withered largely because electronics no longer come with thick instruction manuals.)Metcalf cautions that forecasting BFD's prospects may be premature, but the early signs are not promising, Slate Magazine reported. He gives the abbreviation one point for frequency and one point for unobtrusiveness. (Abbreviations are usually somewhat obtrusive when used in a sentence.) It scores zero for diversity of users because it's mostly limited to newshounds and fervent Obama supporters. The term gets no versatility points, unlike LOL, which has spawned such gems as lolcano and lolcats. Endurance of the concept is a bit tricky. BFD has been in use for many years, but it didn't get a lot of attention before the VP popularized it 2010. If BFD stays linked to the health care reform bill, its life could be very short indeed. If, however, people begin referring to final exams, playoff football games, and their parents' divorces as BFDs, then it will last. Metcalf splits the difference at this stage, assigning it one point. That's a total of three points, which means the expression's newfound fame may not even survive the 2012 election.The other problem for BFD is that it didn't follow the developmental model of other successful neologisms, which usually incubate among an identifiable clique of devoted insiders before entering the broader public conversation. LOL, for example, was limited to the Canadian online bulletin board Viewline in the mid-1980s before the participants spread the expression to General Electric's much larger GEnie system. Other popular expressions, like TTLY ("talk to you later"), BRB ("be right back"), and ROFL ("rolling on the floor laughing"), started in chat rooms, where jargon-loving computing enthusiasts created and refined their abbreviations
.Although computers offer a new medium for popularizing acronyms, the process hasn't changed much in two centuries. A group of newspaper editors employed the expression OK-a jokey misspelling of "all correct"-in 1839, at first accompanied by an explanation of its meaning. The term caught on among the general public a year later, when supporters of presidential candidate Martin "Old Kinderhook" Van Buren adopted the phrase "Old Kinderhook is OK."BFD has one thing going for it-its obvious potential for ironic use. In past decades, people have typically adopted slang terms because they want to associate themselves with the people who already use them. Recently, however, linguists have observed increasing irony in the adoption of slang. Youngsters may use phrases like
LOL-and, eventually, BFD-as a send-up of the parents who use the term. (ANI)
Facebook looking to partner with Samsung to boost mobile advertising sales
Jun 19, 4:06 pm
Washington, June 19 (ANI): With the growing mobility of internet, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg discussed potential partnership with Samsung company's president Shin Jong Kyun during Mark Zuckerberg's Asia tour.
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iMessages encrypted data could be retrieved by Apple
Jun 19, 3:10 pm
Sydney, June 19 (ANI): Software giant Apple had earlier claimed that the US government has no access to its servers but has recently said that it could not furnish certain data to the government even if it wanted to.
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Huawei introduces world's thinnest smartphone 'Ascend P6'
Jun 19, 11:58 am
London, June 19 (ANI): China's telecom giant has unveiled the world's slimmest android-based smartphone- Ascend P6.
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Yahoo follows Facebook and Microsoft in publishing US govt sought 'snoop data'
Jun 19, 11:50 am
London, June 19 (ANI): Internet corporation Yahoo has followed the league of technological companies in publishing reports about 'snoop data' requests made by the US government.
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