digFoot.com - Organizing Your Social Meta Networks in One Place
By digFoot, LLC November 02, 2007 |
|
DigFoot.com started out as a database of social networks organized by categories, types, languages and other relevant Meta data. Members can review and rate the social networking sites, forums or web 2.0 services in the database. Currently, the site features members to create their profiles and linkages to social networks that they belong to – acting as a social networking aggregator.
PR9.NET November 02, 2007 - Los Angeles, CA - digFoot.com, a directory and profile builder for social networks, just launched a new addition to the company's service that allow members to build an aggregated online profile for all their social networks and personal websites. Using the newly launched profile building and email tools; the member's profile can be emailed to friends, colleagues and family as an easy-to-read and convenient way to learn more about the member's social world.
Since the company's launch in June 07, digFoot.com has catalogued social networks from all over the web and so far built a database of over 2000 social networks for the US alone. Visitors who visit the site can search these networks to find new social networks that best match their interests, preferred language and location or simply to use the database for general research of the social networking world.
Bo Kjaer, CEO and founder of digFoot, LLC observed, "It has become more common for the typical internet user to be a member of multiple social networks covering various aspects of the user's online needs. Friends might be found on Facebook and Friendster, pictures are posted on Flickr, the professional network is on LinkedIn and vacation videos have been uploaded to YouTube. digFoot.com consolidates all these networks into one easy-to-read profile email that can be sent to anybody with an email address. By using emails as our primary method of interaction between members, we move the social network outside the web browser and into the user's email inbox, thereby avoiding the dreaded "sign up to read this message" requirements for most requests sent from social networks."
# # #
Download PDF Version:
digFoot.com - Organizing Your Social Meta Networks in One Place
|