I really don't want to know anything about your genitalia Jim. Anyway, I do agree that the 100 friend limit is arbitrary and more than a little outdated. However, I also fail to see the need to have such extravagant numbers of "friends" either. Maybe it's just 'cause I'm not a major Internet celebrity and don't play games online. Come to think of it, if I was a major Internet celebrity I'd probably ignore most of those requests on principle.Jimothy Sterling said:10,000 may be extravagant, but we should at least be able to agree that, like my genitalia, 100 is small and inefficient in a world of such expansive social communication. If you're a member of an online gaming forum, you can easily hit that limit.canadamus_prime said:Ok, while I agree that the 100 friend limit is utterly arbitrary, I still think it's equally pointless to have like 10,000 friends on your list when you're probably not even going to communicate with half or even a third of them.Jimothy Sterling said:If you have that many friends, maybe you're popular enough that the 10,000 would like to keep up with YOU. In my case, maybe I won't have a close relationship with everyone on my list, but I still feel bad that I can't add them all. It's not nice having to reject requests, and I think anybody who ends up joining big communities online will feel the same way.canadamus_prime said:Ok I have to ask, if you could have 10,000 friends how many of those would you actually keep up with? I mean really? Like maybe 10. 20 at most. I'm surprised if you keep up with all 100 that you've got. Having more "friends" is mostly for bragging rights, it's not as though you keep in touch with all of them or even most of them.
It's the fact that it's 100, and only due to a sheer lack of imagination, that drives my problem with this whole thing.
We can't all be working class heroes!canadamus_prime said:I really don't want to know anything about your genitalia Jim. Anyway, I do agree that the 100 friend limit is arbitrary and more than a little outdated. However, I also fail to see the need to have such extravagant numbers of "friends" either. Maybe it's just 'cause I'm not a major Internet celebrity and don't play games online. Come to think of it, if I was a major Internet celebrity I'd probably ignore most of those requests on principle.Jimothy Sterling said:10,000 may be extravagant, but we should at least be able to agree that, like my genitalia, 100 is small and inefficient in a world of such expansive social communication. If you're a member of an online gaming forum, you can easily hit that limit.canadamus_prime said:Ok, while I agree that the 100 friend limit is utterly arbitrary, I still think it's equally pointless to have like 10,000 friends on your list when you're probably not even going to communicate with half or even a third of them.Jimothy Sterling said:If you have that many friends, maybe you're popular enough that the 10,000 would like to keep up with YOU. In my case, maybe I won't have a close relationship with everyone on my list, but I still feel bad that I can't add them all. It's not nice having to reject requests, and I think anybody who ends up joining big communities online will feel the same way.canadamus_prime said:Ok I have to ask, if you could have 10,000 friends how many of those would you actually keep up with? I mean really? Like maybe 10. 20 at most. I'm surprised if you keep up with all 100 that you've got. Having more "friends" is mostly for bragging rights, it's not as though you keep in touch with all of them or even most of them.
It's the fact that it's 100, and only due to a sheer lack of imagination, that drives my problem with this whole thing.
Thank God for you, right?Jimothy Sterling said:We can't all be working class heroes!canadamus_prime said:I really don't want to know anything about your genitalia Jim. Anyway, I do agree that the 100 friend limit is arbitrary and more than a little outdated. However, I also fail to see the need to have such extravagant numbers of "friends" either. Maybe it's just 'cause I'm not a major Internet celebrity and don't play games online. Come to think of it, if I was a major Internet celebrity I'd probably ignore most of those requests on principle.Jimothy Sterling said:10,000 may be extravagant, but we should at least be able to agree that, like my genitalia, 100 is small and inefficient in a world of such expansive social communication. If you're a member of an online gaming forum, you can easily hit that limit.canadamus_prime said:Ok, while I agree that the 100 friend limit is utterly arbitrary, I still think it's equally pointless to have like 10,000 friends on your list when you're probably not even going to communicate with half or even a third of them.Jimothy Sterling said:If you have that many friends, maybe you're popular enough that the 10,000 would like to keep up with YOU. In my case, maybe I won't have a close relationship with everyone on my list, but I still feel bad that I can't add them all. It's not nice having to reject requests, and I think anybody who ends up joining big communities online will feel the same way.canadamus_prime said:Ok I have to ask, if you could have 10,000 friends how many of those would you actually keep up with? I mean really? Like maybe 10. 20 at most. I'm surprised if you keep up with all 100 that you've got. Having more "friends" is mostly for bragging rights, it's not as though you keep in touch with all of them or even most of them.
It's the fact that it's 100, and only due to a sheer lack of imagination, that drives my problem with this whole thing.
Considering I moved to Stoke 2 months ago for University, I am glad that I did not have to see that. At the same time, I am also disappointed I did not.... unless we're talking about Ian "Island Face" Jones, whose head did literally become a small sub-continental landmass that was home to a very lovely couple, originally from Stoke-on-Trent.
Not the proper Stoke-on-Trent, I'm talking about the man called Trent who, for a brief period, hosted the entire city of Stoke up his arse.
You're watching a show about complaints in the videogame industry ... and complaining about first world problems?gardian06 said:This really does feel like a numbers thing, and realistically tracking a larger number of people is more difficult considering a server ping per instance followed by an update of the information, and then storing that information into active memory.
Still: fucking first world problems "I have to many friends, and they don't all fit on my friends list. I have to remember who they are other ways" Now if you will excuse me I think there is a steam sale going on that might be demanding me to spend $100+ good day.