– Audiogalaxy: a better P2P music system than Napster, community chat, and a ground-breaking recommendation engine; this dominated my freshman and sophomore year of college until it was sued to oblivion by the record labels (worth noting, Audiogalaxy relaunched in 2008 as a placeshifting app which I use on a daily basis).
– Digg: my first experience with socially-curated news, made each story into it’s own forum topic with a passionate group of commenters. It was such an exhilarating feeling to see a story you submitted hit the front page; unfortunately for Digg, a botched site rehaul and the rise of sharing within popular social sites like Facebook and Twitter have led to a slow decline of traffic.
– HotOrNot: how can you spend an entire evening looking at strangers’ photos and doing nothing but rating them 1 to 10? Seems so gratuitous now, but there’s no denying that it happened on multiple occasions – that’s not even counting those times your professor was on the other side of the room during computer lab; apparently this site still exists!
– Facebook: ahhh, “The Facebook” just happened to launch when I was in my last years of college, so what did my friends and I do with it back then? Flirt with girls of course! In related news, Google+ might just be the death of my Facebook profile (put me in a circle!).
– YouTube: when I first found YouTube, I would spend hours watching video after video out of overwhelming curiosity, gathering as many people as I could to crowd around the monitor and laugh at some poor soul who probably would have found more dignity on America’s Funniest Home Videos; another site that needs no progress report.
Those are just a few of the sites I can blame for late nights, missed deadlines, and of course, an insane amount of gratification. At techli.com my posts usually reflect some sort of advertising angle, so I’ll tie this one loosely to that recurring theme. At some point, every fun startup has to turn their staggering page views and wildly-impressive engagement rates into a way to keep the lights on and the servers running (or in Turntable.fm’s case, to ward off the impending record label backlash) – may I suggest going ad-supported? What are some of the startups that have brought you unabashed excitement?