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Real names are the new aliases.

In amongst trying to map various of my friends online presences to/from their actual names, I just discovered that someone who I'd seen around LJ for ages and finally got around to enfriending recently is, in fact, someone I first ran into on a mailing list back in 2001. D'oh!

15 hours in, we have 28 for Facebook and 9 for MySpace. Other observations:

* I don't like the way Facebook hides what some links are doing with <a onclick=""/> events. I know it's very "Web 2.0", but in a new system where I'm not sure whether the links I'm clicking on are from Facebook itself or from third-party applications, it's still uncool not to have that affordance. (Granted, it was probably more of a problem because I noticed it on the first couple of links I tried to look at - looking further afield it doesn't seem to be as common as I initially thought.)

* It's certainly less bloated and ugly than MySpace, which both aesthetically and functionally seems to be held together with duct tape and fuse wire from the year 2002. (Man, I haven't seen another ColdFusion fusebox application in years. It's almost quaint.)

* It still feels odd to be talking about stuff from the start of the 21st Century as old :-)

Right, now time for more allergy/head cold medication, and back to work.

Date: 2008-10-06 01:10 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
There are plenty of ColdFusion/CFML Fusebox apps out there. Many behind firewalls and many in public. MySpace was actually using a bastardized version of FB3. A notable large site that uses Fusebox currently is UFCs website. Kinda cool to see random comments about the framework floating around out there though :)

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