Most recent comments


See all comments
Leave your own comments

Nickname: seb robin
Review: Hi, don't know where you got your informations from, but guys, in France, nobody knows about ringo...Whereas the big guy in France is skyblog.com, a blog platform from the radio skyrock.com (hip hop youth radio station) as bourgeois europeen said. I suppose you should not base your articles on PR documents....and read more often (for France) le journaldunet -www.journaldunet.com. Cheers.
Date reviewed: Sep 28, 2006 2:09 PM
Nickname: HonestJohn
Review: I like the point about connecting with a community of people you know. I was surprised by how many old friends I found and reconnected with at www.classmates.com - I could even search their database of 40 million people for free
Date reviewed: Sep 21, 2006 11:37 PM
Nickname: Khairul
Review: MySpace has the mass audience. But it's bug ridden and really, really bad user interface. Friendster works better than most networking sites I know. It's functional and it's not messy. MySpace need to get designers that will take them out of the circa 1995 Internet experience.
Date reviewed: Sep 15, 2006 2:54 AM
Nickname: bourgeois europeen
Review: I wish the article went deep into mentioning other countries' social networks such as http://www.OpenBC.com for business in Germany, http://www.skyblog.fr for France, http://www.Zurna.com for Turkey, http://www.myKrug.ru for Russia, etc.
Date reviewed: Sep 11, 2006 3:55 PM
Nickname: The Ghettos Think Tank
Review: Check me out on myspace.com/oilgasmoney. Bebo is all right but it's that limiting who you can talk to that's the problem. I think that is what makes U.S. consumers stay away. MySpace has so many bugs. As an artist this is very frustrating, especially when they are getting ready to sell music. I think they should do like every other corporation that has become successful and merge.
Date reviewed: Sep 11, 2006 3:30 PM
See all comments
Leave your own comments



The views and opinions expressed in these comments do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of BusinessWeek or the McGraw-Hill Companies.