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Member
(05-15-2012, 09:35 PM)
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#102
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Member
(05-15-2012, 09:37 PM)
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#104
facebook is too valuable for advertisers to go away completely. then theres also the apps within facebook as well as the login and commenting thing as well.
facebook is here to stay, though its extremely over valued. very very very over valued.
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Member
(05-15-2012, 09:42 PM)
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#105
GAF in 2003: Facebook is a fad, nobody will talk about it next year
GAF in 2004: Facebook is a fad, nobody will talk about it next year GAF in 2005: Facebook is a fad, nobody will talk about it next year GAF in 2006: Facebook is a fad, nobody will talk about it next year GAF in 2007: Facebook is a fad, nobody will talk about it next year GAF in 2008: Facebook is a fad, nobody will talk about it next year GAF in 2009: Facebook is a fad, nobody will talk about it next year GAF in 2010: Facebook is a fad, nobody will talk about it next year GAF in 2011: Facebook is a fad, nobody will talk about it next year GAF in 2012: Facebook is a fad, nobody will talk about it next year |
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Member
(05-15-2012, 09:46 PM)
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#106
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avec_pénis
(05-15-2012, 09:51 PM)
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#107
not a chance facebook goes away within a decade. it would take some wholly new service that was way better. the amount of money and marketing it would take is too massive. facebook was pretty much word of mouth and spread to nearly a billion people, cultural phenomenons like that don't happen very often
i expect facebook to spend enough on research to stay on the cutting edge of social networking, but who knows what they will decide to do |
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Member
(05-15-2012, 09:52 PM)
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#108
No, you're not getting it. I communicate with my friends through better means. Skype, MSN, phones. Posting on someones personal wall always seemed ridiculous to me. Entire conversations. on a wall? you have to keep refreshing with no privacy? Ridiculous.
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Member
(05-15-2012, 09:53 PM)
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#109
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Member
(05-15-2012, 09:54 PM)
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#110
huh? you send private messages to each other to have conversations. wall posts are for one-off things.
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avec_pénis
(05-15-2012, 09:57 PM)
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#113
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Member
(05-15-2012, 09:57 PM)
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#114
It's a fad like Blockbuster video is a fad (just the first company that popped into my head). They are providing a service that people like to use so the demand is high. Things will change and the public will want something different, but that won't be for a long time. When that does happen they will slowly fade away in the same fashion as blockbuster.
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Member
(05-15-2012, 09:59 PM)
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#116
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Member
(05-15-2012, 10:01 PM)
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#118
but skype doesn't have all of the other features of facebook. you then have one less place to go. you can browse profiles, musician pages, group pages, your favourite store's current sales feed, etc, all while keeping the conversation open in the page in facebook chat. how is skype more convenient? facebook chat is there on every facebook page. you don't have to have a program open or anything.
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(05-15-2012, 10:02 PM)
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#119
http://www.forbes.com/sites/joannmul...llion-account/ I don't see the value in putting paid ads on facebook. Maintaining official facebook pages, sure, but who in the world would ever click a facebook ad for the chevy aveo or teeth whitening? |
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Member
(05-15-2012, 10:09 PM)
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#121
Quote:
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Member
(05-15-2012, 10:13 PM)
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#122
They could guess scientifically. The company revenue is just over a billion a year, their growth has slowed over the last two years significantly, and their operating costs have doubled in the last year. Should be enough to know a 109 billion dollar IPO is way over valued.
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Member
(05-15-2012, 10:15 PM)
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#123
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Banned
(05-15-2012, 10:16 PM)
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#124
Also, ads don't have to be clicked to be valuable to an advertiser. |
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Member
(05-15-2012, 10:24 PM)
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#125
doesn't facebook chat use skype for audio/video? is the quality really that different?
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Thread Clinging Troll
(05-15-2012, 10:40 PM)
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#130
Absolutely. It brought together IM, video, email, and social networking to become what is often the single destination for people online. It extends far beyond any other social network, and is strongly entrenched in our daily lives. It may not last forever, but I don't think it will fall out of favour unless it completely misses the boat on a new communication tool or unless it's hit by a series of scandals.
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Banned
(05-16-2012, 03:45 AM)
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#131
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USA schools learnt me up something good
(05-16-2012, 04:06 AM)
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#132
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Writing a dinosaur space opera symphony
(05-16-2012, 04:14 AM)
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#133
Social networking isn't going anywhere, but what will really end all these platforms in the future is just that: that they're platforms locked inside boxes.
It seems the direction things are going is 'liberating' the internet from the computer monitor and home box. The pocket super computer, aka smartphone, is like phase 1, babby steps for that. After that, comes stuff like augmented reality and "smart everything". All the social stuff will no longer be an alternative to so-called real life, but seamlessly integrated into real life. (This is the 'augmented' part of augmented reality.) Having a specific facebook vanity page will, to a degree, seem as pointless has having a personal website in that late 1990's style. Ironically, twitter might be a prototype application that merely got started in the old style computer box, but shows the way towards info streams rather than public diary postings on the internet. |
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the walrus
(05-16-2012, 04:22 AM)
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#135
Facebook, unlike Myspace, has been evolving incredibly quickly. It's now more a social platform than a social network, and that's going to entrench itself in the same way Google and Microsoft have entrenched themselves as web and software titans, respectively. We've already seen Google try to replicate (and fail) multiple times to eat into Facebook's share. That alone should show that it's hardly as easy or as simple to dislodge Facebook as it was to replace Myspace.
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Member
(05-16-2012, 04:30 AM)
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#136
I think it's here to stay for quite some time. Social networking is a relatively recent invention that only really gained traction in the past five or so years. How on earth can we predict trends on something with so little data? I don't think MySpace is a fair comparison; it was a totally different era of the internet and they never had anywhere near the amount of users FB has. Comparing it to Coke or the Wii is just plain ridiculous as they are totally different products that actually REQUIRE marketing, whereas FB has become ubiquitous and a household name without.
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Member
(05-16-2012, 11:24 AM)
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#137
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PayPal bishoptl for tags
(05-16-2012, 01:36 PM)
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#139
I don't have a Facebook account, and I'm not "Trying to be different" I looked at it and it did not interest me. I can email my friends and chat on forums and that suits me fine. My life is no better or worse because of a lack of Facebook although Facebook integration into other software I use is a little annoying (like me on Facebook, tell Facebook about this app).
Facebook wont be around forever because somebody will make a better facebook and at the start all the "cool kids" will migrate to it just to be different. I mean really do you want to be on the same social media as your parents and old people? |
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Banned
(05-16-2012, 01:38 PM)
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#140
Personally, I like Google Plus, especially their new iPhone app, unfortunately everyone I know is on Facebook. That being said, I'm about to drop everyone who I have not personally talked to in the last few years.
Last edited by Kosmo; 05-16-2012 at 01:41 PM.
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Member
(05-16-2012, 01:40 PM)
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#141
I think Facebook in particular is a fad, but social networking isn't. Personally, I'm just waiting for the next big thing. I can't wait to jump off the facebook boat. I actually went not too long ago without facebook for a couple months, but had to go back on it to add someone for professional reason.
Also: AZN avenue 4 lyf! |
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PoliGAF Co-Champion
(05-16-2012, 01:44 PM)
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#142
I think social networking is intrinsic to 16-24 year olds for the foreseeable future. It's just too useful when you are that age and are finding your way in this world.
Now, Facebook could easily be rejected by future generations who see it as 'too conservative' or 'too mainstream'. I think the probablity of that happening is very likely. I think you're already seeing the seeds of that backlash right now. |
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Formerly Alaluef (not Aladuf)
(05-16-2012, 02:15 PM)
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#146
It became such an ingrained hub for so many things, I'm on the camp that thinks it's hard to see it going away any time soon, unless there's some sudden shift in social networking that I can't predict.
I'm mostly indifferent about Facebook but it's good to me that it managed to take over completely in Brazil. It was annoying when social networking userbases here were divided between Orkut and Facebook for a while, as the point of these things is having everyone relevant to you in connected in the same place (for that same reason, thankfully the Google+ craze didn't last long here). It's funny seeing people projecting and losing their shit over these networks, you can easily ignore what you dislike about them. I have an account on FB with some pictures and close to zero personal information that I only use for events and social gatherings. It's a very useful feature, but I ignore all the others because they don't appeal to me at this point in time. I'm happy they're there though, my mother has a lot of fun with posting, sharing, etc, and it helps her keep in touch with people she knows.
Last edited by Fuu; 05-16-2012 at 02:17 PM.
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Member
(05-16-2012, 02:17 PM)
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#147
Not really.
He's exactly right. Facebook has been around for 9 years. A strong competitor to Myspace for 8 of those years. The industry leader for 6-7 of those years. Would you call the winner of a console war a fad? Because, right now, Facebook has had a reign at the top that is longer than the reign that most console war winners enjoy... |
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Member
(05-17-2012, 04:45 AM)
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#148
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Member
(05-17-2012, 05:48 AM)
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#149
I can't see facebook disappearing for quite some time. Everyone I know at least has a facebook, and there a bunch who use it a lot. There's like a 50% chance I'll see facebook on someone's computer screen on campus. It's too useful to ignore. I can't even imagine what competition would be like for it, and that's the only way I could see people ditching it.
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This picture? uhh I can explain really!
(05-17-2012, 05:55 AM)
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#150
A fad, to me, is something that is around and hot for a year tops. If you're around for two or more years, you're not a fad. If you get replaced, it just becomes the natural evolution of things. This shit is like saying VHS was a fad because it got replaced by DVD. Myspace got replaced by Facebook, because Facebook was doing things better. Facebook will eventually be replaced by something else, too.
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