YES. the palace, where i spent some of my formative days before eventually working on a 3D virtual world community platform over a decade later. surprisingly, online communities have may have changed contexts over the years but the basis of user behavior remains large the same.
see also the excellent collection of essays and articles The Psychology of Cyberspace (1996) by John Suler, Ph.D.:
The Basic Psychological Features of Cyberspace
From ASCII to Holodecks: Psychology of an Online Multimedia Community

via users.rider.edu
The Hula  Party
I  accidentally stumbled on this Hula Party one night while cruising the  Palace. Apparently, the party was a spontaneous event. Note the use of  theme specific avatars, props added to the background image, and  painting onto the background - all as decorations to visually enliven  the event. Although I didn’t have any Hawaiian type props in my  collection, several of the members generously gave me some of theirs.  Here you can see me attempting to assemble the props onto my avatar.  Once appropriately dressed, I changed my name to “TanakaOwl.” Members  often alter their names, as well as their props, to match the situation  at hand.
(1996)

YES. the palace, where i spent some of my formative days before eventually working on a 3D virtual world community platform over a decade later. surprisingly, online communities have may have changed contexts over the years but the basis of user behavior remains large the same.

see also the excellent collection of essays and articles The Psychology of Cyberspace (1996) by John Suler, Ph.D.:

via users.rider.edu

The Hula Party

I accidentally stumbled on this Hula Party one night while cruising the Palace. Apparently, the party was a spontaneous event. Note the use of theme specific avatars, props added to the background image, and painting onto the background - all as decorations to visually enliven the event. Although I didn’t have any Hawaiian type props in my collection, several of the members generously gave me some of theirs. Here you can see me attempting to assemble the props onto my avatar. Once appropriately dressed, I changed my name to “TanakaOwl.” Members often alter their names, as well as their props, to match the situation at hand.

(1996)



Social media is like reality TV shows for people with monitors instead of TVs. I think that [in] 2010… it’s not enough to just say “I’m great”, you’re actually going to have to go out and show people what the hell you’ve done.
                — Eric Reiss on Radio Johnny: Eric Reiss Predictions for UX in 2010


persistence

long-form is hard. i’ve all but given up blogging, having kept some sort of online journal or blog for over 8 years now. it has just gotten old and i don’t have anything interesting to say. most other people have nothing interesting to say as well, and now we have 140 characters to say it in.

my ugly last blog of sorts devolved into a sort of link junkyard. i thought the links were interesting themselves, but it was a pain to look at and you had to click through 2 different screens just to get to the embedded link excerpts. i kept the vox blog as long as i did because i was lazy about changing my workflow, and because it had a cool short-ish url. i dutifully killed it today to let the UI rest in peace.

there was a time when i used to write regularly. i don’t think it is a coincidence that my writing dropped off around the same time i actually started to use my twitter account (it spent its first year dormant out of protest against noise). we’ll just have to see how this one goes.

PS: i keep meaning to read the attention economy of social media by adrian chan, but my attention span right now is that of someone who procrastinates in many browser tabs.