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kraquehaus

Website: http://www.kraquehaus.com

Bio: UI Designer, Musician, Graphic Designer, Artist, etc.

Facebook will sink under the weight of socially obligated "friendships"

November 27, 2007 2:01am

ZFACTOR:

This is already being done with some sites. I know that LJ has this function and I assume others do as well. Although LJ is a blog, it does have some "social network" qualities.

That beings said, I completely agree that most these sites need some ACL functionality and it is asinine that they have yet to employee rich ACL functionality.

I believe Facebook has a very low feature version that lets you set on/off viewability of portions of your profile, but they only section it based on "not a friend, friend, friend network" rather than letting you create sub sectors of "friends".

A badly needed feature for any social network site.

Facebook will sink under the weight of socially obligated "friendships"

November 27, 2007 1:18am

I have been saying for a while that there is a bubble and the bubble will burst, but it won't be industry wide like last time. The Social Network Craze™ we are seeing today is going to die, albeit a slightly less fiery death than I would like.

Part of the reason is what Cory goes into here. Another part, which is slightly specific to Facebook, are the apps. I blogged my feelings about the Facebook apps:

blog.kraquehaus.com/240977.html

(We'll see if I can imbed a link into my comments...)

Another reason why I think the craze will die is because social networking sites are much more about fashion than about technology. This is a very important point. The users are fickle. If it isn't cool anymore, then they will trash it and move along. I think that this is much more of a reason as to why people have moved from one service to the next. It has much more to do with following the Cool Kid Migration™ than it has to do with social morals and etiquette. A service becomes SO popular that the Cool Kids™ have to find a new way to set themselves apart. Once MySpace has gotten too popular, then they must relocate in order to retain their "bleeding edge" social stature.

Part of what drives the Cool Factor™ is indeed technology, but that is merely a footnote.

Right now the cool thing to do is to leave MySpace. "MySpace is SO last season! OMG!" Soon Facebook will no longer be the "new black".

Once this trend starts to pick up momentum and is seen by the people holding onto the dollar bills, things will change. Social networks will only be useful as leased user bases rather than these current ridiculous purchase evaluations we are seeing. ($15 billion for Facebook?!?)

Social network sites, if they "succeed", will see a huge spike for a good amount of time, then they will plummet back down to real world numbers once people have moved on. I think the key for long term sustainability and value for these companies would be best delivered via niche marketing rather than global appeal.

Take Linkedin for example. They are a social network, but one that delivers a very specific need without a lot of fluff. They might not end up being the huge behemoths that others try to be, but they will have a much more realistic and steady incline with much more user retention in the long term.

As a graphic designer who is also a member of multiple bands, I will be near the top of the list of people who will be ecstatic when MySpace dies down enough to where I no longer must touch it for promotions.

Another problem: Banner Ads

Here is another problem I stumbled upon while thinking about this comment: The business model of ad based revenue is driving these online applications (these social networks are applications, after all) towards bad user experiences.

The "user experience" I am referring to is purely with regard to the UI of the sites. The companies are delivering UIs based on heightening page reloads and page views in order to ramp up profits. This reward system does not feed a positive return for good UI.

What I would like to see is this: Take the ads out of the system and use a subscription based model.

I realize this most likely won't happen since there is just SO much money in advertising, but it would be a model geared towards obtaining better user experiences which would in turn obtain healthier long term revenue.

This is how LiveJournal operates and I gladly pay every year for a subscription. (Now if LJ would only update their system with better functionality.......but I digress!)

This has nothing to do with my disdain for banner ads. I have no problem with a site showing me advertising. Actually, if a site employs very good advertising such that they are showing me ads for products I actually want, then we both win. My point is entirely about modifying the reward system within the business models.


In summation, The Social Network is Dead, Long Live the Social Network!

Droid Sans Mono, a sweet monospace font

November 17, 2007 1:31am

Why would you use a fixed width font? I can understand using it for things like code, but "real" fonts (for lack of a better term; I do not mean it to be demeaning) are spaced to be read by the eye better. Proper spacing and things like ligatures that greatly help with your eye processing words.

I could possibly see an argument about using monospace for coding, but for actual writing? Monospace would seem to be like etching into wax tablets when you have a perfectly good piece of pen and paper sitting next to you.

Fun with Google's Image Labeler

October 16, 2007 12:49pm

I'm sure that there will be a name for this anonymous taunting soon, but I'm not clever enough to come up with it.

Anonytaunt

a·non·y·taunt [uh-non-uh-tawnt]

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