X-Git-Url: https://git.decadent.org.uk/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2FFlox.pod;h=b8d3d7a5f02108f7c18c32a13cacf073dbd306b6;hb=d6437cf11ffb95f80143ea9af87e3bc972b0807e;hp=ee0a96ac0d3097995c330422a57c6f5920591705;hpb=b60178968c046206aa97123141d4dca524fb67c7;p=maypole.git diff --git a/doc/Flox.pod b/doc/Flox.pod index ee0a96a..b8d3d7a 100644 --- a/doc/Flox.pod +++ b/doc/Flox.pod @@ -1 +1,21 @@ -=head1 FlOx: A Social Networking Site +=head1 Flox: A Free Social Networking Site + +Friendster, Tribe, and now Google's Orkut - it seems like in early 2004, +everyone wanted to be a social networking site. At the time, I was too +busy to be a social networking site, as I was working on my own project +at the time, a web application server called Maypole. However, I +realised that if I could implement a social networking system using +Maypole, then Maypole could probably do anything. + +I'd already decided there was room for a free, open-source networking +site, and then Peter Sergeant came up with the hook - localizing it to +universities and societies, and tying in meet-ups with restaurant +bookings. I called it Flox, partially because it flocks people together +and partially because it's localised for my home town of Oxford and its +university. + +Flox is still in, uh, flux, but it does the essentials. In this chapter, +we're going to see how it was put together, and how the techniques shown +in the L chapter can help to create a sophisticated web +application. Of course, I didn't have this manual available at the time, +so it took a bit longer than it should have done...