Facebook's two features last year, news feed and mini-feed, play a crucial role in activating interactions between the circle of friends. With news feed, you can get a clear picture of your friend's recent activities. With mini-feed, you can let your friends know about your activities.
Although these two features have aroused privacy concerns of some users, some even write a user script to completely clear their mini-feed. However, you can't help but admit that these two features increase the frequency of logging on to Facebook, and extend the time for every activity on Facebook. In addition, it also allows users to exercise restraint when adding friends, because you do not want news from a large number of people you don't know to fill your homepage.
In fact, Facebook pays great attention to restraint. In more than three years, Facebook is almost on the right path. From opening to some universities, to all users with. edu mailboxes, to all Internet users, to launching news feed and mini-feed, to building a Facebook platform. We don't know if Mark Zuckerberg has a full set of plans for a long time, but at least we can see that Facebook is not eager to become a fat man. For most entrepreneurs, the desire to limit expansion is not easy. Many entrepreneurs lack confidence in their projects.
Facebook's attention curve and growth curve are both so perfect that they have not been scaled up and down. It Exactly represents the team's peaceful and confident attitude.
Being restrained is neither inaction nor willingness to be mediocre. A website that has been in existence for three years is still unimproving. This is not a matter of restraint, but a lack of ideas. Restraint is a good grasp of the pace and sense of separation, and a firm confidence in the path you have chosen. Facebook is indeed a good case in this regard.
Facebook's success has been and will continue to spur a bunch of followers. However, keeping up with the trend is often difficult to exercise restraint, which will only lead to the appearance of the odd scenes where hundreds of video websites fight each other.
From: KESO's blog http://blog.donews.com/keso/archive/2007/08/06/1193978.aspx