I understand all of your concerns, averaging one date per year is not ideal, and finding the "perfect" person is no longer an option, I'm looking to find "any tolerable person". It's hard to understand the concern from women though, at least here in mumbai I never see women my age single or even by themselves. Don't get me wrong, there are TONS of beautiful women here, they are just always with some guy (those who appear to me to be wealthy, but this is based just on appearance). I think the bottom line is that for a male to date successfully after college you need to have a lot of money and be willing to spend it conspicuously.
thanks
Anuj
Friday, June 5, 2009
Putting Public Social Networks To Work For Business
External public social networking services, such as Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, and Friendster, can be valuable sales, marketing, and support tools. These services comprise extensive networks of users who are self-organized into groups and communities. Users establish connections directly with other users to form a personal friends network. Users also join groups and communities that are organized around attributes such as products, lifestyles, entertainment, institutions, politics, and geographic locations.
The key difference between social networks and more traditional online communities is the friend-of-a-friend (FOAF) trust model that exists in social networks. Users maintain direct connections to their friends, but they also have some level of access to the direct connections their friends maintain to other people. The FOAF model enables users to interact with network users to whom they are not otherwise directly connected. Users can establish different rules of engagement for different types of connections in their network; the closer the connection to a user in terms of degrees of separation, the more trusted that user is. For example, privacy settings can be made more stringent for a FOAF than privacy settings for a directly connected friend.
brought to u by
www.vertexlifestyle.com
The key difference between social networks and more traditional online communities is the friend-of-a-friend (FOAF) trust model that exists in social networks. Users maintain direct connections to their friends, but they also have some level of access to the direct connections their friends maintain to other people. The FOAF model enables users to interact with network users to whom they are not otherwise directly connected. Users can establish different rules of engagement for different types of connections in their network; the closer the connection to a user in terms of degrees of separation, the more trusted that user is. For example, privacy settings can be made more stringent for a FOAF than privacy settings for a directly connected friend.
brought to u by
www.vertexlifestyle.com
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