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kyt | 13 years ago

Too little, too late. Their brand is tarnished forever and they'll never recover.

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wmeredith|13 years ago

Bullshit. Go ask a twelve year old who's going to start creating their online persona this year what Myspace is. They won't know what you're talking about.

astrodust|13 years ago

Then their eighteen year old brother will flick them in the ear and call them a loser and a noob and they'll quickly learn.

thom|13 years ago

That seems like a problem too, though.

antihero|13 years ago

Meh, the kids won't care. If some popular people use it because it's way more fun and exciting than shitty old Facebook, (plus they hear the odd story about how fun the old MySpace was) then it could get it's foot in the door.

anotherblue|13 years ago

Judging by displayed design, it definitely feels more fresh than Facebook and Twitter. I see strong influence of Microsoft's metro design language as well...

prebrov|13 years ago

History has some examples of legacy brands being revived. Mini, Hush Puppies, Pabst Blue Ribbon are some of the known examples. Forever and never is a really long time.

Being on the edge but akin to old school is actually valued in music subculture. So while Facebook becomes a tired commodity, MySpace does have a shot in getting back as a 'true skool' brand for a music social network. Think of hip crowd looking back at the 80s and 90s for inspiration.

hnriot|13 years ago

soon it will have retro caché

dholowiski|13 years ago

I think this is actually possible. Aren't we all tired of Facebook and twitter, and waiting for the next big thing?

guylhem|13 years ago

Like an aol.com email address?