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  2. Blingee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blingee

    Blingee was founded as part of a website network Bauer Teen Network, and marketed towards young people who wished to add personalized imagery to their Myspace pages. The site, however, was different from other web-based GIF editors, allowing users to make their own profiles and other social network-like functionality.

  3. Myspace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myspace

    Myspace (formerly stylized as MySpace; also myspace; and sometimes my␣, with an elongated open box symbol) is a social networking service based in the United States. Launched on August 1, 2003, it was the first social network to reach a global audience and had a significant influence on technology, pop culture and music. [ 2 ]

  4. What Happened to Myspace (and Is It Even Still Around)? - AOL

    www.aol.com/happened-myspace-even-still-around...

    If you spent time on the internet in the early-to-mid-2000s, you've probably asked yourself at least once, what ever happened to Myspace? The site was really one of the world's introductions to ...

  5. Tom Anderson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Anderson

    Anderson's father was an entrepreneur. [5] As a teenager at San Pasqual High in Escondido, California, Anderson was a computer hacker under the pseudonym "Lord Flathead" (friends with Bill Landreth), and prompted a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) raid after he hacked into a computer system at Chase Manhattan Bank.

  6. File:Myspace 2010 logo.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Myspace_2010_logo.svg

    Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 12:43, 23 October 2011: 460 × 120 (4 KB): Iuri i10: Reverted to version as of 16:50, 19 February 2011: 16:50, 19 February 2011

  7. Chyron Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chyron_Corporation

    In the 1970s it pioneered the development of broadcast titling and graphics systems. Use of its graphics generators [1] by the major New York City–based US television networks ABC, NBC, and eventually CBS, integrated text and graphics into news and sports coverage on broadcast television and later on cable TV. [2]

  8. Dancing baby - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dancing_baby

    The "Dancing Baby", also called "Baby Cha-Cha" or "the Oogachacka Baby", is an internet meme of a 3D-rendered animation of a baby performing a cha-cha type dance. It quickly became a media phenomenon in the United States and one of the first viral videos in the mid-late 1990s.

  9. Matt Furie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Furie

    Matt Furie was born on August 14, 1979, in Columbus, Ohio. [1] [2] His great-grandfather was from Sicily.He attended summer classes at the Columbus College of Art and Design and then studied art at Ohio Wesleyan University, earning his BFA in 2001.