Nowadays, technology plays a very important role in daily life. We may point out the indisputable fact that technology is the core of country's development. Technology also contributes to the success and development of many firms and organizations because of its intermediate communication function.
Technology-mediated communication or Computer-mediated communication (CMC) can be defined as integral to the virtual workplace and often creates the structure for international conversations. Computers and computer-related technologies such as laptop, mobile phone, tablet,etc... are stimulating and supporting a virtual revolution in the workplace that is turning international business and global markets upside down.
Communication occurring within a computer-mediated format has an effect on many different aspects of an interaction. Some of these that have received attention in the scholarly literature include impression formation, deception, group dynamics, disclosure reciprocity, dis-inhibition and especially relationship formation.
CMC is examined and compared to other communication media through a number of aspects thought to be universal to all forms of communication, including (but not limited to) synchronicity, persistence or "record ability", and anonymity. The association of these aspects with different forms of communication varies widely. For example, instant messaging is intrinsically synchronous but not persistent, since one loses all the content when one closes the dialog box unless one has a message log set up or has manually copy-pasted the conversation. E-mail and message boards, on the other hand, are low in synchronicity since response time varies, but high in persistence since messages sent and received are saved. Properties that separate CMC from other media also include transience, its multimedia nature, and its relative lack of governing codes of conduct. CMC is able to overcome physical and social limitations of other forms of communication and therefore allow the interaction of people who are not physically sharing the same space.