English Language & Usage Asked on April 7, 2021
Can you use the preposition "into" with "connected"?
Here’s the sentence:
"When social data is connected into the platform, it’s able to interact with all other data in a unified cross-channel environment."
A child of the last century, to whom channel and platform originally had rather different meanings, I have to dig into definitions to justify this objectively. I also beg forgiveness for treating data as plural rather than singular, although this is irrelevant to the answer.
Into is a useful preposition. One of its meanings is:
into = to the inside or middle of a place, container, area, etc.
as such, into has sense of direction to it: from outside towards the inside.
Platform is used:
= Operating System; also the computer architecture and equipment using a particular operating system>
= the type of computer system or smartphone you are using, in relation to the type of software (= computer programs) you can use on it
channel = a means of communication or expression: such as a path along which information (such as data or music) in the form of an electrical signal passes
The construction is now clear. Social data flow in a channel and are connected to the platform and to the software embedded in the operating system (OS) by input routines and hence they flow towards the interior of the software (they are input, to be processed by the algorithms that are embedded in the OS and the architecture).
When they are processed by the algorithms they are processed together with other data that were input from other channels. The network of channels is unified by the architecture of the OS and its software routines and it is within that architecture and its routines that all data are handled together.
The use of into rather than in is useful to give the sense of direction and flow so useful to understand the concept of what is happening.
Answered by Anton on April 7, 2021
There is no doubt that "connected into" can be used in certain contexts: ngram, connected into.
As for "connection into a platform" that is another matter; it is usual to connect circuits to other circuits and you might also say "connected into" occasionally, although this is not at all common for circuits (ngram). The idea of connecting into or to a program does not seem right.
ref. Network card A network card or NIC ( network interface card ) enables a computer to be connected into a LAN ( local area network ).
When it comes to data, the concept of connection does not seem proper. Are commonly used the phrases "the data is fed to/into and "feed (the) data to/into sth" (ngram). When dealing with programs, "to feed" is a better term. The following formulation is much preferable, I believe.
Answered by LPH on April 7, 2021
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