Implies all site owners should have accounts
Another Social Network Bites the Dust
Are kids not interested in school?
It appears that social network Sconex is no more.
Never heard of it? You're not alone. Admittedly, I am not familiar with it myself, but according to Silicon Alley Insider, it was around in the early days of social networks.
In what seems like an interesting (if not noble) concept for a network, Sconex's aim was to connect high school kids within their own school communities, as well as stay connected with school activities.
A description of the site on aboutus.org reads:
Sconex is the unofficial website for your high school - a place where you can read about your classmates, share stuff with your friends, and communicate with people from your school and nearby ones.
Sconex was purchased by Alloy in 2006, and then saw a steady decline in traffic. Some say that a lack of interesting content was likely the cause for its failure.
The huge success of MySpace and Facebook in recent years is also a likely factor.
I'm thinking a lack of interest from the kids in anything school-related may have been another. You know how kids can't wait until school lets out? I don't think it would be a stretch to assume most kids are not eager to race home after a day at school and get on a social network that is school-related. Their parents are already likely hassling them about getting their homework done as it is.
I wish the site was still up for perusal, giving me a better feel for what the world is now missing, but it appears to truly be dead, leaving nothing but a lifeless "address not found" message in its place.
Someone at Alloy told Ypulse that the company is shifiting its focus to teen.com. Sadly, this tip appears to be the only thing that has gotten people to notice that Sconex is M.I.A.
Implies all site owners should have accounts
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4 Comments
I love the Work Analogy
I love the work analogy, it makes sense that kids wouldn't want to talk about school when they are at home. Facebook and other social networks are known for their reach of schools children, but honestly how many of them do you see actually talking about school.
sconex
I have never heard of it.
Bad Idea from the start
Connecting kids in school with other classmates is not a hot topic. That's like connecting co-workers that talk about work when they go home. They should have switched the focus from students to parents when they noticed the decline of traffic, but that is only my two cents.
RE:
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