The internet in 10 years time
Arthur Goldstuck looks at the past 10 years to predict the next 10 years in the life of the internet.
Ellies tickled BLUE with home
An elephant family has found a new home at the Blue Canyon Game Conservancy in Mpumalanga.
Search News24
     Technology : News Get News24 on your mobile Terms & conditions 
Homepage
Sci-Tech
News
South Africa
Africa
World
Sport
Entertainment
Finance
Health
Galleries
 
News24 turns 10
US Elections
Zimbabwe
Xenophobia
Aids Focus
Power Crisis
More...
 
MyNews24
Columnists
Sports Columnists
Feedback
 
National Lottery
UK Lottery
Travel
Competitions
Horoscopes
TV Guides
Classifieds
Currie Cup game
 
Sudoku
Aces High
Silly Solitaire
Word Cube
Make 24
Golf Solitaire
Battleship
 
Stidy
The Biggish Five
Treknet
 
Newsletters
Weather

Cape Town:
14-19°C

Durban:
19-25°C

Johannesburg:
9-29°C

Weather Page

Traffic
Gauteng KwaZulu-Natal Eastern Cape Western Cape
All regions
Indicators
Rand/$ 9.3800
Rand/£ 16.0900
Rand/€ 12.7200
Gold/oz $847.40
Gold Mining 1898.59
+0.00%
All-share index 20595.23
+0.00%
 
Nerve-wracked
A psychologist and a psychiatrist answered users? questions on anxiety disorders on World Mental Health Day.

 
Afrikaans
English

2007's networking frenzy
19/12/2007 13:05  - (SA)  

Over 500 000 South Africans are now on Facebook. (Werner Beukes, Sapa)
  • Music deal for networking site
  • Facebook 'did a bad job'
  • MySpace hoax mom has her say
  • MySpace hoax ends in death
  • Facebook soothes outraged users
  • Workers' Facebook confession...
  • Free shows on networking site
  • Make new 'friends' on Facebook
  • Angry matrics bombard Facebook
  • San Francisco - Online social networking websites saw their ranks swell and values soar this year as everyone from moody teenagers and mellow music lovers to mate-seeking seniors joined online communities.

    Google's freshly released "Zeitgeist 2007" reveals that seven out of the 10 hottest topics which triggered internet queries during the year involved social networking.

    A Top Ten list compiled by the world's most-used search engine includes British website Badoo, Spanish-language Hi5, and US-based Facebook.

    Video-sharing websites YouTube and Dailymotion are on the list, along with the Club Penguin online role playing game where children pretending to be the flightless birds "waddle about and play" together.

    Virtual world Second Life, where people represented by animated proxies interact in digitised fantasy settings, is the final social networking property in the Zeitgeist Top Ten.

    The world has only seen "the tip of the iceberg" when it comes to online social networking, says MySpace vice president of business development Amit Kapur.

    "It is a natural step in the evolution of the web," Kapur told AFP.

    "The web is getting more personal. I think you are going to see much more of that happen on every website across the web."

    MySpace aspires to become people's homes on the internet, with profile pages serving as online addresses as well as springboards to online music, video, news and other content conducive to their tastes and interests.

    "It is a next-generation portal," Kapur said.

    Facebook membership doubles

    Industry statistics show Facebook membership more than doubled in the past year to about 55 million, while reigning champion MySpace grew 30% to top 110 million.

    One in every four US residents uses MySpace, while in Britain it is as common to have a profile page on the website as it is to own a dog.

    "We are very social animals and this allows us to ramp it up to a whole other order of magnitude," says Professor Jeremy Bailenson, who heads a Virtual Human Interaction Lab at Stanford University in Northern California.

    A strong appeal of online role-playing games and virtual worlds is that they free people to "interact as their ideal self and not their real self", according to Bailenson.

    "You can be whatever age you want - 20 forever - dress any way you want, be any gender you want, and be socialising with zillions of people at once all the time," Bailenson told AFP.

    His lab has created 3-dimensional digitised models customised with people's facial expressions and mannerisms.

    "You can make a digital version of you that is animated so your grandkids' grandkids could put on a helmet and you can read them a story from the grave," Bailenson said, adding virtual communities offer a sense of immortality.

    "People love virtual community."

    High-speed, affordable internet

    Interest in online communities surged in 2007 as the gregarious nature of humans merged with increasingly available high-speed internet and affordable computing hardware, according to Bailenson.

    "It has reached a critical mass," Bailenson said. "It is not just the geeks doing it. It is my mom."

    California-based social networking website BOOMj just launched as an online community for Baby Boomers, the first of which turned 65 years old this year.

    "Boomers grew up meeting people through mutual friends, which a lot of times meant it was the bartender," said BOOMj spokesperson Jim Welch, himself a "boomer".

    "Now you have Boomers re-entering the single world, widowed or divorce, and on new-relationship terrain they haven't set foot on in many years. As they re-enter the single world they reach out to the internet."

    Younger generations are much more comfortable with the internet, which has woven ever more tightly into their lifestyles.

    "It won't replace face to face interaction," Bailenson said.

    "It is another way of thinking about maintaining social relationships. It is here and it is not going anywhere."

    Forrester Research senior analyst Jeremiah Owyang said the social networking rage is happening "where ever there is high-speed internet".

    Owyang said membership at the website Cyworld includes 85% of South Korea's internet users. A major company in that country gave employees annual bonuses in the form Cyworld currency.

    Online communities and virtual worlds are forums for commerce, advertising and business meetings, said Owyang.

    Global and mobile

    MySpace's Kapur says social networking will become increasingly global and mobile as the use of internet-linked handheld devices becomes ubiquitous.

    The meteoric rise in popularity of social networking websites is driving up their values in the minds of investors as the firms grapple with how to cash in on membership bases.

    Microsoft recently paid $240m for a 1.6% stake in Facebook and Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing paid $60m for a piece of the San Francisco company.

    The investments give three-year-old Facebook a theoretical value of $15bn. News Corp-owned MySpace wouldn't disclose its value, saying only it has about triple the membership and activity of Facebook.

    - AFP



    What is this?
    Yahoo Digg Del.icio.us Facebook Brought to you by OUTsurance Car Insurance
     
    News24 Headlines on your Facebook profile News24 on mobile  


    VEHICLE SEARCH
    BMW
    2008
    650 Ci Coupe AT
    R695000
    VOLVO
    2008
    S40 2.0 MY06
    R272000
    NISSAN
    2006
    Almera 160 Luxury
    R74990
    FORD
    2006
    Ranger 2.5 TD Hi-Trail XL Super Cab Dsl
    R142500
    HYUNDAI
    2004
    Getz 1.6 5-dr
    R69990
    MAZDA
    2007
    Mazda6 2.0 Active
    R171900
    VOLVO
    2008
    S40 T5 2.5 Geartronic
    R256579
    FORD
    2008
    Ranger 3.0TDCi Hi-Trail D-Cab XLE Dsl PU MY07
    R283091
    TOYOTA
    2005
    Corolla 140i MY05
    R89600

     

    About us | Advertise | Contact us | Job opportunities | Press Releases | Site map

    Back to top
     Sponsored links
    Life Insurance
    Car Insurance
    UK Lottery
    First for Women
    Your Homeloan
    Bid or Buy
    Medical Aid
    Education
    SA TV Online
    Best Car Deals
    Loans & Credit Cards
    Compare Quotes
    Life Insurance for Women
    Car Servicing & Repair
    Piggs Peak Casino