Thursday, November 1, 2007
Conclusion
However, as addictive as these sites may be I doubt I will continue to use and update my MySpace profile as often after this assignment. The newer Facebook has won me over, as it appears to have more to offer, also my friends are all on there more so than MySpace. Facebook is much less of a ‘look at me!’ site than MySpace is, and as someone more interested in making connections rather than showing off, Facebook is the better choice for my social networking.
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Post 6 - This one? That one? or Both?
After signing up to Facebook last week, which seems to be the current trend among social networkers, I have found myself visiting that profile much more than my MySpace one. I have found that while it may not be a pretty or visually appealing as MySpace, the general layout of Facebook is much easier to work with on a more frequent basis. The personalisation lies in the sections you choose to include on your profile. These are interactive applications which you can participate in as a team against or with your friends. These include movie compatibility tests, sending gifts, trick or treating, and many other varieties which I have yet to discover. In addition to these interactions, you can rate movies and books, do an never ending TV trivia quiz –which can win points for your team of friends, play vampire and attack or recruit your friends, share photos, display your family tree, and write messages on your friend’s ‘wall’ – which is much like the comments section of MySpace. Something I found very interesting is the difference in security between the two networking sites.
The reality is that these sites have a relatively short shelf life in terms of technology and content. Inevitably something new and more advance will come along and the others will be forced to update or face extinction. I have heard from friends that MySpace is trying to include more Facebook-like content, but I have yet to see anything overly interesting.
Friday, October 26, 2007
Post 5 - MySpace Alternatives
While MySpace is a popular site with millions, or billions of users, in the last few weeks I have found that when talking to friends and family of mine, that many prefer Facebook. In fact one of my friends, who had previously been boycotting these ‘social networking’ sites, has even joined up herself. I thought I’d sign up to see exactly what the big appeal of Facebook is. From what I have heard, Facebook has all these added extras which you can send to your friends, as well as quizzes and compatibility tests. These all make MySpace sound very boring, plain and much less interactive. MySpace tends to just sit there, unless you chose to do something to make something else happen. I find the whole thing rather static. Unless you care about having thousands of friends, you stick to those that you know, and even if you add a few music artists, or celebrities, you still probably don’t have a thousand friends. Even posting comments is very one sided. You post a comment on someone’s profile, they reply on yours. So this could become confusing if you did not remember what exactly it was you wrote that they were replying to.
Another main activity of MySpace seems to be ‘pimping’ as it’s called your profile with colours, pictures and all sorts of bells and whistles. But there is not much constant interaction. Messages go back and forth, but there is always that delay in response, and you can’t post a lot of information in one message. This is why I prefer email, where you can say everything you need to say, including private information in as big a message as you want. It is possible to have a conversation through email, or better yet, instant messaging. Years ago that used to be all the rage, now it seems to have been pushed aside by these new social networking sites. I suppose the idea is that you can do all of these activities through MySpace or Facebook, but it is not even close to being the same sort of interaction. MySpace is almost like having a personal website, and just having it there for people to look at.
There are only two real benefits I see of using MySpace, the first is the ability to find people you have lost contact with –if they have a profile, and everyone seems to have a profile. The other is that you can upload all sorts of pictures that you can share with your friends. But you could probably do the same thing with a link to a photobucket or flicker album.
Friday, October 19, 2007
Post 4 - Update
The best feature or function of MySpace to me seems to be the Music element. It's perhaps the most useful and non-trivial. There is plenty of information about tours, upcoming singles and albums as well as being able to use their music on your page. I recently changed my background music from Fray's 'How to Save a life', to Snow Patrol's 'Chasing Cars'. It's a pity you can have a few rotating songs. -Maybe you can but only if you know how to figure it out.
My friend count has gone up, and I have a friend who saw me updating my profile the other day, and gave me the link to her page. I didn't know she even had a page. These days it's getting harder to find people, because they have many different email addresses, and if you have one that they use for MSN, but not for email or MySpace, you might be stuck searching for them for ages, depending on how much you know about them. However, if you sit there looking through all of your friends friends you can find so many other people you want to include in your own list.
I have started adding to my MySpace blog, but nothing too interesting. Most of the content is random things I feel like sharing, like favourite quotes or interesting details about upcoming events. I have a regular blog, in fact I have two, so I don't tend to post about really personal stuff, or what I've been up to. I could combine all of them into one on MySpace, but I like having the blog which is a little private, more of an online diary. I don't care who reads it, but I'm not advertising it around either. MySpace is meant to be seen, that's part of the point.
Maybe I will become more comfortable with MySpace in the next few days when I will have a chance to update things, and play around with the overall look of my Profile. I will also attempt to get more involved with the pages of my friends, as so far there are people's pages I have not made any comments on, or even really taken the time to look at yet.
Friday, October 12, 2007
Post 3 - The Extended Network
I find it very interesting how many music artists have pages, with their music available to play within the page. Not only can you listen to their music, but you can use it on your own MySpace page. Just out of curiosity, I recently searched for a band I like, 'The Fray'. I found their page, and added their song "How to Save a Life" to my own page, and now it plays every time someone visits my MySpace profile. This is a great way of making songs well known and getting them out there. Every time you visit a friend's page, you hear a song and if you like it, you might look who the artist is and the name of the song, and then find their MySpace page and become more interested in hearing some of their other songs, or going to their concert.
It's interesting the way you interact with people on MySpace differently, depending on if you see them regularly, or just from time to time. In my case, I find that the friends I see a few days every week are more into MySpace and leaving me comments and notes. Which I then reply to and we create an odd sort of conversation, which is the sum of multiple comments sent back and forth. But then again, it may be just that these friends are more MySpace 'savvy' and more frequent users than my other friends.
-Carlie
Sunday, September 30, 2007
Post No.2 - MySpace Origins
MySpace was launched in January 2004, Chris DeWolfe and Tom Anderson. Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. bought MySpace in July 2006 for $580 million, however they have kept DeWolfe and Anderson still at the reins as CEO and president. Originally created as an alternative of Friendster.com, MySpace became a place where musicians could share their music with the public, and has since launched the careers of artists who would otherwise be virtually unknown. Friends can also share the music they like by adding songs as background music for their MySpace page, or creating a playlist feature to choose tracks from. As well, people can post videos of all varieties into their pages.MySpace has also recently created its own record label which has released artists, such as rap band 'Hollywood Dead', which developed a large fan following on MySpace.
MySpace has become the new teen culture, in the sense that before teens would spend hours talking on the phone, they now spend hours posting comments on friends pages, browsing the pages of strangers and making new friends, as well as spending a great deal of time creating the look of their own pages. 'Pimpmyspace.org' is a site that has thousands of images and tools to create the desired look. Through searching this site you can search for certain themes or characters, or browse through the categories. Once you find something you want, you copy the html code provided straight into the area you want it to go on your MySpace page. I tested this out myself, with a 'glittering' Care Bears gif image. It just gives a little 'pizzazz' to the page.
A few years ago when meeting new people, we would trade email and msn addresses. Now every time I make a new friend, they ask me if I have MySpace. I have friends who don't use email but will happily contact you through MySpace. -Which I find a tad ridiculous!
Internet Links used for the creation of this post:
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2006-01-08-myspace-teens_x.htm
http://www.pimpmyspace.org/
-Carlie Sheehan
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
1st Post - Welcome to MySpace.com
http://www.myspace.com/carliesheehan
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Carlie