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In 2009, Dan Cederholm and Rich Thornett beta-launched Dribbble as an invite-only site where designers shared what they were working on: “The name Dribbble came about from the dual metaphors of bouncing ideas and leaking your work.” [3] The first "Shot" (a small screenshot of a designer's work in progress) was posted by the user "Cederholm" on July 9, 2009.
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Development of Tumblr began in 2006 during a two-week gap between contracts at David Karp's software consulting company, Davidville. [3] [4] Karp had been interested in tumblelogs (short-form blogs, hence the name Tumblr) [5] for some time and was waiting for one of the established blogging platforms to introduce their own tumblelogging platform.
We Heart It was an image-based social network. We Heart It describes itself as "A home for your inspiration" and a place to "Organize and share the things you love." [1] Users could collect (or "heart") their favorite images to share with friends and organize into collections.
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While dribbble can achieve similarly, technology wise, it's politically pretty Apple-oriented-only, on the client-side, it targets users who find anything else unusuable, and pretty much everyone who uses dribbble has something like an iMac, an iPhone, or an iPad Pro. I myself use my iPad Air with iPadOS 14.6 Stable as my only desktop computer.
In strictly technical terms, a site's actual home page (index page) often only contains sparse content with some catchy introductory material and serves mostly as a pointer or table of contents to the more content-rich pages inside, such as résumés, family, hobbies, family genealogy, a web log/diary ("blog"), opinions, online journals and ...