The Aging Brain Meets The Future of Social Networking

A while back I mentioned I've gotten a Facebook page and a Myspace page. They've been fun to toy around with, and I wouldn't be surprised if they're a harbinger of how we will all trawl for online information in the future. But to those who are asking to be friends at Myspace, leaving messages for me, or just wondeirng why the page is just so lame, I'm sorry to report that I haven't been able to log in for a few days. If my kids were just a couple years older, I'm sure I'd have all the tech support I needed to deal with this. But for now, or at least until the MySpace minions come to my aid, it's all about Facebook.

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The aging brain IS the future of social networks.

When we reach a critical mass of grown-ups social networks will become useful.
Instead of juvenile twittering we can have virtual communities who know things and the social network provides easy delivery of this knowledge.
My blog is a lonely campaign to point out the benefits of computing for adults and to poke fun at youngsters

My brief experience with Myspace was all bad. Where Facebook has a well-designed interface, Myspace took me nearly an hour of clicking random links to change my password.

Myspace seems to be mostly the hangout of angsty teens, while Facebook tends to attract real people as well. ;-) I'll take the occasional annoying advert over bandwidth-guzzling slideshows and music any day.

Hmm, I had a real point when I started writing this comment, but it has managed to escape. Maybe I'll post again if it comes back.

Myspace is made of bugs and shitty coding. If you're unable to log in, odds are good it's a problem on Myspace's end, and there's nothing you can do about it.

By Cairnarvon (not verified) on 27 Sep 2007 #permalink

Carl, as many others here, I have had trouble with MySpace - immediately after registration, in fact. The user support never helped - actually, never replied to my queries.

Facebook, on the countrary, works like a charm.

MySpace and Facebook are both interesting experiments from a social science perspective. I wonder if most users would agree that MySpace is more about teenage bravado and finding out about music and celebs, while Facebook is kind of a fun version of LinkedIn?

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