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July 27, 2007 5:15 PM PDT

Rate your friends online

by Miriam Olsson

Do you have the urge to tell your friends how much you like them or maybe dislike them? Now you can share your feelings about them on community Web site FriendChart, which debuted this week in beta. The site slogan is "Your friends at glance".

Interested? I wouldn't do it. It's OK to put yourself out there--that's a personal choice. But to expose your friends and rate them, that's drawing a line, at least for me. I haven't even thought about my friends in terms of scores.

In an example of one rating, FriendChart founder Patrick Jackson gives a 4,5 score out of 15 for a person he met a few times. "Met XXX at a swimmers party--I think it was a birthday. Didn't know him too well then, but had fun hanging out. There were cards and beer pong involved. Fun!"

Not only can you rate and write about your friends, your profile also provides charts on how much time you actually spend with them, for example. So if one of your friends feels left out, he or she can compare the time you spend with them compared to others.

Jackson's description of a friend chart is that "it's natural for friends to come and go in our lives. A friend chart is a way to capture the natural beauty of this ebb and flow," he said in a statement.

The HTML coding is available to add charts to other Web communities such as MySpace.com, and is constantly updated with the new information you publish of your friends on FriendChart.

The official release of the site is scheduled for January 2008.

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Look at this...
by mattumanu July 27, 2007 8:24 PM PDT
>>If you do not want to wait for someone to accept your friend request, or if you can't find your friend's account, create a puppet account for them.

A puppet account is one that you maintain in someone's name for the purposes of posting entries about them. Anyone can see your entries, but no one can access or add the puppet as a friend.

Later, if you add them as a friend, you can copy entries made under the puppet account to the friend account.<<

Create an account FOR someone... That's just stupid.
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"web 2.0"
by dondarko July 27, 2007 9:19 PM PDT
example of stupidity

onto something more interesting and productive...
Are you kidding ?
by general_ts0 July 30, 2007 7:11 PM PDT
Why would you do this ? what purpose does it serve ? Can we distance ourselves any further from society ? Not only will we not tell each other how we feel about each other, we'll hide behind a monitor and broadcast it to the world ? Who gives a damn?
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