The phone itself was a pretty big deal, of course, helping intimacy transcend proximity. But phone books provided a crucial element to the system: intrusiveness. In the beginning of 1880, Shea writes, there were 30K telephone subscribers in the US At the end of the year, that number had grown to 50K, and because of phone books, each one of them was exposed to the others as never before. While many American cities had been compiling databases of their inhabitants well before the phone was invented, listing names, occupations, and addresses, individuals remained fairly insulated from each other. Contacting someone might require a letter of introduction, a facility for charming butlers or secretaries, a long walk.
Tag: socialnetworks
Gatsby
the first non-annoying 4sq app. straight out of the headmap manifesto
Facebook Relationships
research shows not all fb friends are friends!
Friend Connect
Google is now making it easier for Websites to surface Friend Connect features with what it is calling the Social Bar. This is a toolbar that Websites can add to their homepage or any other page they wish, and then they can add links for drop-down gadgets that lets site visitors do things such as sign in via Friend Connect, see who else has signed in recently, check out comments, or site members, all from Social Bar.
i wanted to install this on my dormant blog, but movable type deciced it no longer likes me. time to move to wordpress.
My Google Profile
didn’t realize this had launched
Livejournal Postmortem
despite having all the features 5 years ago they failed because they listened too much to the weirdos.
Google Moderator
this is quite useful, but beware of speakers giving questions all of 2s thought before answering. all too common, and then you get cute or useless answers.
Lookery
elias’ new gig. ads targeting for social networks or something
Order a Missed Call
Slydial turns out to be only the latest in a breed of new technologies that fit squarely into an emerging paradox: tools that let users avoid direct communication.
Social networking saved New Orleans
In a powerful presentation on the marriage of software tools and crowds of people in desperate need of organization around a cause, Alan Gutierrez of the nonprofit group Think New Orleans detailed an inspiring post-Hurricane Katrina story of how a crash course in social networking helped people emerge from the rubble; find their voice; fight the government; solicit help; and save their neighborhoods, schools and each other.
alan’s projects. including google maps to visualize demolished houses