Social Networking was designed for the initial purpose of making
communicating with long distance friends, relationships, family members, co-
workers, etc. a whole lot easier. Although this statement still holds true,
it's a wee bit harder to find it through all this "fluff". What is this
"fluff" exactly? This "fluffy" unnecessary goodness which just like candy
is fun, colorful, easy to get, and completely unnecessary for our rotting
youth. In hopes of correlating my evaluation essay to my proposal essay,
I'm hoping to achieve the proposal for a separation of Facebook. Still
being controlled under one site; I would like to propose two forms of
Facebook- a Facebook for businesses and the strictly commercial use of
Facebook, which represents the Facebook we have today. As a look back to
the many problems/issues that arrive with this popular website, here is a
little review: just like any other product in the world, the need to constantly
change and stay updated to keep things fresh and interesting is in order to
stay, well up to date; but do these set of "rules" apply to popular
networking sites such as Facebook? Facebook was originally designed by a
Harvard student hoping to be able to connect with people on his campus via
the Internet. As the years went on it was available to other colleges,
which set Facebook apart from other sites such as MySpace, Xanga, and
Friendster. Facebook could not be accessed by just anybody; it was strictly
designed for high school and college students who were listed under the set
list of schools that Facebook recognize (Yadav).
When looking at how Facebook was designed back then, to what it is
now, it's almost a complete turn around. Although the main purpose is still
present, it's hard to uncover behind all these flooded applications. These
applications vary from games, to picture editing software, to finding your
"top stalkers." But with all of these a...