"Clocking Cultures” by Carol Ezzell was a great article and I really enjoyed reading it. I especially love this topic because we have been discussing this same notion in my communications class. I’m fascinated with the idea that all cultures view time so differently. American’s usually always have some form of clock on them and some use planners, date books, or calendars to stay punctual. In other cultures this idea could seem ridiculous. I know that personally I couldn’t go a day without my day planner or calendar and clock on my phone. I have to have everything written down or I will not remember.
A great example which we discussed in communications class the other day was in the United States if you were heading to an interview for a new job you’d like to hopefully obtain you would arrive probably a few minutes early jus to make sure you made a good impression that you’re punctual and organized, but in some cultures if they say they have an interview the next day even if they specify a time, that could leave the whole day open to whenever they’d like to come in. As mentioned in the article, “any time is Trinidad time.” I loved that expression. It expresses the casual and relaxed nature that people in Trinidad have with time and punctuality.

The article about Wikipedia’s “Anyone Can Edit” policy did not interest me as much, but I still was interested in learning about the history and evolution of this site that I visit quiet often. The site is so popular and has literally "blown up" in the past few years. As for the new policy, I think that it’s necessary and I don’t think that people should be upset about it. The site shouldn’t be used in
a harmful or vulgar way, so only people who would want to do that or want that to happen would be upset with the new policy. I think that Wikipedia is a very successful site and will continue to grow larger in the years to come. I actually predict that with time the policies may become stricter. This will probably cause more complaints from users of the site and may be potentially more hurtful than helpful for the site.