Friday 3 October 2014

Social Media leading up to today

In 2002, one of the key social networking websites before Facebook was Friendster. It had almost the same features as SixDegrees except that it looked much better, it felt much better to use, and at this time, people really started to connect to the internet so it had a much larger user base.

Picture of friendster.com in 2003
This was the main login screen. I was able to obtain pictures of "take the tour" which shows what a profile looks like.

Sample Profile for friendster 2003
The tour really only consisted of that image, and another which just stated that you can have your own group of friends. By examining the code at this time (2003) and comparing it to SixDegrees (2000) the one main difference is that friendster took advantage of was CSS (refer to blog post about key terms to know more about CSS).

Of course there are many other things used to create websites such as PHP for internal structure, and to manage things like logging in and keeping track of statistics, as well as SQL for storing login information, profile information, posts and much more. However, the main code I will be examining will have to do with the layout and design of the websites.

If we take a jump to 2005, we can see a typical profile in the picture below.


If we compare it from the last picture of a profile we saw, we can see a similarity of the design in the description part, but now we can also see this persons group of friends, what they are a fan of and even blogs! This is a huge leap from just the standard adding friends and posting text which is what we have seen up to here. I believe at this point in time, more than 17 million people were using friendster.

One more key feature which we see in all social media websites today is photos. In 2005, friendster had the ability to store up to 12 photos on a profile, and even more if we were to use a, "friendster blog". The reason I believe they only allowed a set amount of photos compared to today where we can upload thousands is because back in 2005, we were still discovering the technology. Storing data costed much more money back then as servers could only hold up to a certain amount of data which was significantly less than it is today.

In my opinion, the biggest design change of the friendster home page came in mid 2006. It featured a clear, concise, non-bloated page where it felt comfortable being on.



At this point, there were over 27 million profiles on Friendster. It gets harder and harder to analyze the code the further the years go on because of how much more content there is. Another new feature was that people of Friendster could share videos.

As the years passed and as the website was updated, so was most of the code. New standards, features and ideas were brought forward to update the code and with that, new features and designs were created. Looking back from the first login screen to this one, we can clearly see how much more thought went into designing this. In all fairness, in 2002, there probably wasn't the same technology available to create a login screen like this. As people around the world came up with new ideas, more social media websites were being created.

Friendster started to wither in 2004 when another website MySpace surpassed it, popularity wise.


Sources:


"Friendster.com - Internet Archive Wayback Machine." Friendster.com - Internet Archive Wayback Machine. N.p., n.d. Web. 02 Oct. 2014.

"SixDegrees.com - Internet Archive Wayback Machine." SixDegrees.com - Internet Archive Wayback Machine. N.p., n.d. Web. 02 Oct. 2014.

"The Brief History of Social Media." The Brief History of Social Media. N.p., n.d. Web. 02 Oct. 2014.
 
 

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