Friday, 18 June 2010

faceparty password july 2010

As we discussed in my previous blog faceparty password, there are literally thousands of people a week yearning for a password which can allow them access to what has become a cult site over the past few years.
It's difficult to say just why faceparty became so popular. Some say it was because it had a stronghold monopoly in an unsaturated market. Others say faceparty offered a very fast interface for individuals to connect with each other. Whatever the reason for facepartys initial popularity, despite a huge email database problem which forced it to drop millions of its users and sell out to anarchy towers on a profile by profile basis, it still retains around 200,000 devout users who seem to enjoy the site for what it is. A journal of faceparty passwords talks about the possibilty of a scam behind all this faceparty password business!

To descibe faceparty in few words it's hard not to mention the lower forms of life that seem to peruse it's corridors. Many profiles seem to detail how challenging their life is, how distraught they were when they were beaten down in their life (usually by an unidentified 'Dave' or 'Kev') but how by being true to themselves (despise all men) they have found a way to true happiness (usually argueable given the nature of the preceeding content).
It's not that these people shouldnt be allowed to vocalise their thoughts (though we'd rather they didn'), it's just the average contented individual who occasionally enters a social network of this type, shouldn't necessarily have to bear witness to just how little self respect most of these strange women have for themselves.
That's not to say you wont find some decent people on faceparty - you'll just have to look bloody hard and it may take a while!

Praise the lord then for bongal. In an over saturated lunatic asylum type market place, along comes a social network which draws focus away from lurid tales of gloom and perverse user to user interaction and magnifies a need for a wholesome, useful social network.

Bongal seems to identify one of life's core motivators - to meaningfully interact with other human beings. More specifically to interact with like minded individuals.
Unlike faceparty, bongal's unique selling point is as far and wide as the spectrum of a persons interests. So broad in fact that it's impossible to see how this fast expanding network could ever slow down.
As with faceparty a user has the ability to interrogate the database. However the similarity ends there. As bongal pushes the boundaries to exploit the internets real potential. A user in bongal can now locate other users by their exact interests. This means that of course bongal could be used for dating means, but then as a lifestyle site, why shouldn't it provide that?

For now it seems like the one to watch is bongal, my advice for those looking for a faceparty password is to join bongal. In my experience, seldom does such an innovative website come along and not go the distance. Bongal has already been tipped as a more intuative, interesting website than facebook.
For now this remains speculatory, but it seems improbable that bongal wont reach fever pitch extremely quickly.

Thursday, 17 June 2010

faceparty password

its easy to find the faceparty password, however the question on most people's minds is starting to shift from
"Where can i find the faceparty password?" to "Why am I looking for the faceparty password?"
This is due to the fact that a new interest based social network called bongal has recently launched and
promises to revolutionize the way the average girl and guy interact with each other on the internet.

Well i've visited the bongal website and i have played with the interactive map and searched for people by their
interests and I have to say that compared to faceparty this site looks like it's had real thought behind it's
development. Faceparty connects people by their age/gender/location and relationship status i.e. single etc.
Bongal takes this idea and pushes the conventional to the max by introducing the first mainstream social
network to incorporate interests into the search facility.
Faceparty limits the user to what now appears to be an outdated method of searching for people, where as
connects its users by whatever they're interested in. So for example if you are a big nightclubber, you can
search for all the girls/guys who like nightclubbing who are within 5 miles of where you live. This seems
to make perfect sense - why wouldn't single nightclub going girls and guys like to talk to each other?!
It strikes me as the final piece in the social networking puzzle. It almost makes one question why no one has
thought of this genius idea before. So simple yet compared to the likes of faceparty - so many light years
ahead.

No longer are ignorant people whining to each other about what they 'don't' like about the world. Finally
bongal address what people 'do' like.
It's clear to see the difference between the two sites - faceparty is a holding pen for the intellectually
challenged, a place where they can air their grievances to a willing community of down and
out near to wells (there is the odd decent user on faceparty I must add - the unfortunate few who have
probably been misguided enough at some point to create a profile.
Bongal is a positive site on the other hand, where real people talk to real people about anything and
everything that interests them. The likelyhood seems to be that bongal would be much more likely to
attract genuine girls and guys without the facade of being a dating site, more a opportunity to enhance
your lifestyle.

In short faceparty would be far better off without the silly faceparty password and indeed if it were to
abolish it's sign up fee- a ridiculous £25!! It's no wonder why bongal are overtaking faceparty as the
place to be online, if they keep up their sterling work they will not only prosper to stratospheric heights
but will also maintain my loyalty as a fantastic alternative to faceparty.


Monday, 14 June 2010

Faceparty

Faceparty used to be the best place to meet people online. Millions of members exchanged messages and friendships were forged. The online world had discovered Social networking.
The arrival of facebook changed all that and people migrated from faceparty in their thousands leaving the owners of the site with a large database of people who weren't actively using it.

As we all now expect, the internet is changing constantly. Shifts in user trends, implementation of new technology and an increasing knowledge of how those trends can be exploited to maximize commercial profit now see the worldwide web gaining unprecedented power and unleashing a stronghold over our society in general as the virtual world merges with traditional offline marketing.

Thankfully every so often as with facebook, a product comes along that is inventive yet so simple that we wonder why no one thought of it before. Facebook connected us to our friends and family and we thought social networking had reached it's peak. As with many shifts in market trends, few of us see them coming, so as BONGAL prepares to launch itself onto the world stage we are left pondering why yet again we didn't see this one coming.

Faceparty was designed to connect us to people we don't know and allow us to search for them by age, sex and location. Facebook allows us to build a network of people we do know and keep in touch with them all in one place. Simple yet genius. So why if these two niches have been exploited do we need yet another network in our lives? What possible use might we have for yet another 'social network?'
Well the answer has been yielded in the unlikeliest of places. Ilkley, in West Yorkshire. Home to two of the internets brightest young entrepreneurs. Rory Marshall and Veriol Jones.
Although only 30, Veriol has vast experience in business and finance. Marshall on the other hand is a top fashion model and has starred in TV commercials for Ralph Lauren, Lancome and Marks and Spencer's. Prior to his modelling career Rory had a background in media and a keen interest in the web.
So how is it these two young men from Ilkley came to designing the most exciting social network since the arrival of facebook?
Their ambition has always been a simple one. "Connect me to everyone and everything the I am interested in."
In a recent press release Marshall states " There has always been a imbalance between the potential of the internet and the actual fulfillment of this potential. There are billions of people on the earth. Most of whom I will never have the ability to draw inspiration from, nor exchange my thoughts and views. So why I am I restricted to conversing only with those people I have met in my existing social life? Imagine the power that we could harness if we were able to efficiently connect with everyone on earth who we could possibly be interested in?
If the internet can go anywhere on earth but I cannot, why can't I use the internet to find people exactly like me? And so BONGAL was born.

From what I can see the message is clear. Bongal is not a replacement for facebook, it is a tool to find people who share your interests. It is in effect like a giant forum mixed with a social network. However it's appeal lies in the fact that you appear to able to generate an entire network of like minded people who share your exact interests. From people who like the same fashion as you, the same music, the same charities- to events and organisations you might want to get involved with. Among the many benefits, I can see writers contacting film makers, musicians connecting with singers, singers connecting with studio technicians, artists exhibiting their work to those people interested in their particular medium, not to mention the sports hobbies that would flourish as more and more people connected with each other. The list of positive effects that will come from BONGAL is as infinite as our ever expanding interests, which makes it an absolute improbability that bongal won't find it's way into most of our lives at some point in the future.



2010 is the year of bongal