PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

What are analog bulletin boards used for today? Analysing media uses, intermediality and technology affordances in Swedish bulletin board messages using a citizen science approach.

  • Christopher Kullenberg,
  • Frauke Rohden,
  • Anders Björkvall,
  • Fredrik Brounéus,
  • Anders Avellan-Hultman,
  • Johan Järlehed,
  • Sara Van Meerbergen,
  • Andreas Nord,
  • Helle Lykke Nielsen,
  • Tove Rosendal,
  • Lotta Tomasson,
  • Gustav Westberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0202077
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
p. e0202077

Abstract

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Analog bulletin boards are omnipresent in Swedish urban areas, yet little systematic knowledge about this communication medium exists. In the shadow of the rapid emergence of digital media the analog bulletin board has received less attention than its digital successors, many of them having incorporated similar functionality with novel technical solutions. In this study we used a citizen science method to collect 1167 messages from bulletin boards around Sweden aided by school children and teachers, with the purpose of shedding new light on what is communicated on the boards, by whom, using what types of technologies and in what way the messages refer to other media. Results show that the most common messages are invitations to events, such as concerts, lectures and sports events, followed by buy-and-sell ads for goods and services. The most frequent sender is an association, for example NGOs, sports associations or religious communities. Almost half of the sampled messages were professionally printed, about forty per cent were made by home printers. Only six per cent of the messages were handwritten, almost exclusively by private persons as senders. Moreover, we show how the analog bulletin board has adapted to recent changes in media technology-a media landscape which is saturated with electronic- and mobile media. Further, the bulletin board still holds a firm place in a media ecology where local communication is in demand, and exists in parallel with electronic media. Close to forty percent of the messages contained hyperlinks to web pages and we found (and removed for anonymization purposes) more than six hundred phone numbers from the dataset.