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14 reasons the early 2000s were the golden age of social networking

Add you on MSN! What’s your Bebo username?

IN THE MID-2000s internet culture was fairly new – Youtube, Twitter and all the sites we hold so dear today were only just starting out.

What we did have in 2004 was MSN Messenger (later Windows Live Messenger, but who called it that), Bebo and MySpace, and they shaped our social lives for the better part of those years.

Now MSN Messenger is no more, MySpace lost out to Facebook, and Bebo is still trying to soldier on, but it’s just not the same.

Here are the little things that made mid-’00s social networking incomparable.

Choosing your own personal username and icon

Forget using your real name – you could have a new name, a name that would represent you to the whole online world, so you had to choose carefully. Sxxygurl91/ArsenalFan13/slipknot_rock666 it is!

msnonline Twitter / @MSNmesenger Twitter / @MSNmesenger / @MSNmesenger

Spending hours customising your profile

On MySpace, you could customise your page exactly to your needs using HTML. On Bebo, it was all down to choosing the perfect skin for your profile. Both of these took time and effort.

cute-layouts-for-myspace-4 My3gb My3gb

Choosing your top friends

Bebo allowed you to have 16 top friends, giving you a lot more wiggle room than MySpace, which permitted only eight. The fallout from being omitted from a top friends list could make or break a friendship.

arrows-3 The Journal The Journal

Coming home, rushing to the computer to see who’s online

You’d just seen all your friends in school, but you went straight to the computer anyway, just in case anything cool had happened on the way home.

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This was the most exciting sound you could ever hear

Fafilh07

“Sorry! Wrong convo”

The SHAME of accidentally sending a revealing MSN message to the fine thing in your class instead of your best mate. Better send a few hundred of these things to cover it up.

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Getting caught up in insane group chats

A notification usually popped up: “i_love_horses has added you to a group chat.” Clicking on this sent you to the seventh circle of hell, complete with a continuously rolling, impossible to follow chat feed, arguments spanning multiple pages, and countless “This person has left the chat” messages.

putersmash Reactiongifs Reactiongifs

Sending nudges and winks over MSN

Before Facebook pokes, there were nudges and winks – they bumped the chat up to the top of the pile and shook the computer screen so violently you couldn’t possibly ignore that person any longer.

nudge-screenshot TechTree TechTree

Appearing offline to avoid someone

This function could also be used to make it seem like you had some sort of life outside the computer. See also: signing in and out to get someone’s attention.

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This guy was your best (or only) friend on MySpace

dm52507ms Zdnet Zdnet

Getting added by your favourite band, freaking out

MySpace was THE place to follow musicians and bands back in those days, and getting a friend request from your favourite band was a moment to cherish. They knew you existed…almost.

timbaland-friend-request Judiciary Report Judiciary Report

Having an online friend you didn’t know in real life

His name was Chad, he lived in Minnesota and went to a real American high school, just like the movies. You didn’t know what he looked like, but you knew he loved My Chemical Romance, so he was definitely sound.

tumblr_lzxkpcvt8k1qfdwsio1_500 Wordpress Wordpress

Agonising over the perfect song to feature on your MySpace profile

It was essential that people think you were cool and/or deep – this song would express how you were feeling when words just weren’t enough. You also added song lyrics to your quotes column on Bebo, or left them as your personal message on MSN.

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Spending hours trying to take the perfect profile photo

The preferred pose was the MySpace Angle: camera held above head at arms length, high exposure, head tilted downwards. Filters were just as popular back then – black and white especially, to help convey your angst.

myspacepose Flickr / xJason.Rogersx Flickr / xJason.Rogersx / xJason.Rogersx

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