Facebook
always seems to be tweaking its users’ experience. Over the past couple of
years, the site has changed a lot, with designs geared towards sharing content
without also encouraging spam and more real-time features and low-effort ways
to interact with friends.
But there are basic parts of the social graph that
could use more attention. I was reminded of this by a talk by LiliCheng, general manager of
Microsoft’s Future Social Experiences Labs, last week at Defrag2009, a technology conference in
Denver. Cheng went through some of the intelligent
features that are part of Wallop, a social network spun out of Microsoft
Research. (Wallop as originally envisioned no longer exists; instead, the
company now makes applications for other social networks.)
Wallop was designed to automatically cluster people into groups, Cheng said, making it easier to communicate with relevant friends. It also took emphasis off people who weren’t active on the site, displaying grayed-out nodes to show when a user hadn’t posted for a long time. “These are really simple things that I think are still missing in a lot of our social tools,” Cheng said.
Other social networks could perhaps be much more useful if they could group and manage contacts automatically. It would be good to know, for instance, if a friend rarely logs into his Facebook account, so I could try sending a message a different way. Although Facebook and other social networks do include features that allow users to make and manage lists of friends, few users take advantage. The user experience would perhaps benefit a great deal if these features could become more automatic.
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