![]() ![]() The real killer of old technology is the human need for the new-new-new. Twitter is anonymous but much more focused on self-promotion rather than the conversation/community. It was quite freeing back in the days of the late nineties. On chats you were whoever you wanted to be. You can’t just change your hotmail address and essentially become a new person every time you want to like you can with a chat. Facebook and MSN were for people you know and want to talk to again. MySpace was like a cross between a forum and a community like Friendster. What is missing now that chat room provided was a mini-community where there was no commitment to be made profile-wise, but you had a handle and didn’t have to show your unshowered self to the world. In a video chat you’re only as anonymous as your image allows you to be, but at least there is a group of strangers there. In a stranger chat you’re completely anonymous but are talking to a single person. I think the direct replacement of IRC chats is video chat rooms and stranger chats. I can only name a few with very large active usership. In 2013, forums are rapidly dying as well. What’s the real world equivalent of that? A roomful of people talking to each other at the same time, with people shouting louder and louder to be heard over the rest? Who wants that? Reply With a chat room, multiple people can be typing at the same time. In the real world, if you have a small group of people talking, they take turns. Maybe chat rooms aren’t popular because there isn’t really a real world equivalent. If the message threading is well-designed, you can follow a discussion and not run into situations where you don’t really know what someone is replying to. You can then follow-up on subsequent messages. You can focus on a particular message, and reply to it. That’s not so much the case with a forum. You miss something, and, for all intents and purposes, it’s gone. Granted, I haven’t seen that many either, as they were something I rarely used. I never saw chat rooms that were well-designed. Sometimes, forums were so busy they served as sort of a chat room. Larger systems than mine didn’t even have chat rooms. I ran a BBS that had forums and chat rooms. What do you think? Are chat rooms dead? If so, what was the nail in the coffin?Ĭhat rooms rely too much on people being online at the same time. I may have (inaccurately) predicted the death of Facebook, since I thought more people would be learning how to use Twitter, but Facebook is still gaining in popularity for whatever reason.īlogging and social networking are being touted as Web 2.0 concepts, because they encourage the input of the Average Joe, but didn’t we achieve a similar kind of interaction more than ten years ago with chat rooms? Perhaps we are no longer content with anonymous conversation we want to know, become friends, and follow the people with whom we engage in conversation? Friends can connect, share their thoughts, join groups, form ongoing discussions, and so on. Are those the only people who still “hang out” in chat rooms? That would be a very sad and sobering revelation.Įven though it can be a scary place at times, Facebook has almost become a replacement for the chat room. Why don’t we stick around in the chat rooms anymore? The only place where I ever hear about chat rooms these days is when middle-aged news reporters investigate Internet predators and pedophiles. I find this shift in preferences to be a little strange, because we still spend a fair bit of time surfing around on forums and discussion boards. These days, I’m just as addicted to the Internet as I’ve ever been, but I haven’t come within arm’s reach of a chat room for years. I could join just about any conversation, talking about the latest video game from Nintendo or even venturing into the world of politics if that’s what I wanted to do. When I was a teenager in high school, chat rooms were all the rage, providing a venue where we could connect with people who had similar interests. In contemplating how far the Internet has changed in the last 10 or 15 years, I realized one very important aspect of the Internet that seems to have virtually disappeared: chat rooms. It doesn’t feel like it was all that long ago that I was dialing up with my 33.6k modem and chatting with my friends over ICQ, but that was eons ago in the context of the online world. The Internet is a place that is constantly evolving and changing with the times. ![]()
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