Word: clickings
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...crowded and I get enough spam as it is. Still, for the truly stubborn, note that the mantra “If you build it, they will come” simply doesn’t apply here. More than fancy photos or flash animations, more even than easy one-click credit card transactions, what Harvard students want out of web sites is content—up-to-the minute data that is at best informative and at least entertaining. Thefacebook.com may be great now (it’s one of the few projects I’ve listed here that...
...hooked up with and, to show there are no hard feelings, their boyfriends on his friends list. With 414 friends and counting, Jermaine Beatty ’04 clearly just spends his days sitting by his laptop indiscriminately friending people in the faint hope they might accidentally click “accept” as they reach to scratch their chin quizzically while futilely scanning their mental facebook for the name Jermaine Beatty...
This is an understandable instinct. First, there are the manifold problems of having an ethernet connection in every dorm room to maximize the procrastinatory pleasures of having a world of shopping but a click away. And then there’s the thrill of the first MasterCard, opening up the world of deferred accountability that monthly bills allow (a world sadly populated by the all-too-adult specter of Debt). That there is actually very little that needs to be purchased during termtime, particularly given the required meal plan, is a fact conveniently overlooked by the serial spender...
Harvard students are no longer the only ones cyber-stalking their classmates and professors on thefacebook.com. With the click of a keyboard and squeak of a mouse, students at Columbia University and Stanford University can now track down that hottie in section or get help with problem sets...
...that folder. If a circle is red, it means you haven't. To look inside each circle (folder), you simply rest your mouse over it for a moment. The company claims Fractal:PC makes it easier to find folders and files, in part because you don't have to click to open a folder. Meanwhile, Grokker ($49, from Groxis), which uses a similar system of colored balls to cluster Web-search results by topic, now works with Google and six other search engines...