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bokonist | 10 years ago

I also thought it was going to be a fad. What is interesting is that everything people use Facebook for day-to-day existed back in 2005. We used email for sharing life updates, various tools for photo sharing, AOL Instant Messenger for chatting, mailing lists for groups, email and evite for organizing events, etc. The novelty of Facebook was profile browsing and poking each other. And if Facebook had just remained that it would have been a fad. What is impressive about Facebook, is how they managed to little-by-little get everyone on their network, and little-by-little beat out the tools people were using before Facebook.

Interesting, now, in 2015, Facebook is a worse tool for me than it was in 2009. Any tool that my boss is on, my aunt is on, my old high school classmates is on, etc, has lost any coherence to it. I now have to obey standard internet security: anything posted on the internet or on Facebook in my real name has to be treated like it is on my resume. Because, de facto, it is.

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Natsu|10 years ago

I solved that by being one of the few people who have never used the site or made a profile, even though I could have done so back when it required a .edu email address.

HelloThereHuman|10 years ago

I have a different experience. I don't know a single person who used to send life updates with email, or engage in mailing lists. At least to this individual, it was very obvious why Facebook was going to be a success when it arrived, it had all the basic 'tools' you needed to communicate and stay in contact with family and friends.

nostrademons|10 years ago

I think this is a very good example of why Facebook succeeded. Everything Facebook does was done (oftentimes better) by a niche tool with a niche audience of early adopters before. Facebook managed to cross the chasm with all of them and unify them together into a single social networking experience. It brought all these tools that were in use by small populations to the mainstream audience.

drcross|10 years ago

It's better to think of and use Facebook as a placeholder for identity and not a platform for expression.

rndn|10 years ago

This statement makes me feel nauseous.

justintocci|10 years ago

i think of it as a dating site.