Turn your site into a place people can bump into each other

(cauenapier.com)

50 points | by eustoria 2 hours ago

12 comments

  • xuhu 35 minutes ago
    I hope sites that just provide a way for people to assemble offline will be the new thing soon.

    A photography guide's site that rallies amateurs for walk tours. A planning board for a foreign language practice group. A site with a schedule and registration form for a sports event.

    When I read "online social" my head thinks "not-really social".

    • Schiendelman 2 minutes ago
      I'm working on a game that helps with this. You leave your little bunker in a post-apocalyptic world and find the land around you contaminated. You walk, run, any workout, to claim territory around you, and gain energy you can use to clean up. You start building greenhouses to grow food and start rebuilding the ecosystem. It's all on the real world map underneath you, and all the interactions between people in the game are cooperative: you get more benefits helping another player with most actions than doing the same thing in your own territory.

      The game tricks you into going for walks or runs regularly since you need those energy points for everything, and I'm building out more cooperative behaviors to give you reasons to go walk with someone else, go work together to fight an alien infestation, and more. You'll discover other players in the game who are near you in the physical world, and be able to request help, thank them, give them benefits, all positive.

      I've learned a lot from Niantic's strategy, but they've never leaned into actually helping people improve their fitness, or work out together. I'm hoping I can help solve this problem you're talking about, at least for getting people fitter!

  • sam_hosseini 4 minutes ago
    This is so much fun! Thanks for making this!
  • graypegg 1 hour ago

        > The goal wasn't to build another social network.
        > It was to bring back a small feeling that the web used to have: the sense that there are actual people on the other side of the screen.
        > Town Square is intentionally tiny and forgetful. There are no accounts, no profiles, no follower counts, no permanent chat history. Messages exist only while people are there to read them.
    
    Cute idea! But maybe this is just me having a different experience, but people having accounts/permanence was one of the defining “old web” feelings people keep talking about. A few people that were always in comment threads, or people with their own blogs linking back to you etc. People didn’t have the sign guestbooks with the same info every time, but they would anyway because they’re building up a persona. I get that you don’t want any social-media-y popularity contests, but… that is sort of what the web 30+ years ago was like.
    • cauenapier 1 hour ago
      I'm actually thinking about implementing some sort of "permanence" for some people, specially for recurring visitors of a given site. But that's still an early thought.
      • graypegg 27 minutes ago
        Would that be a little guy permanently on the page even if the user isn’t present, or a permanent persona for a user across visits?
        • cauenapier 0 minutes ago
          A permanent persona for a user across visits. Could even be across website visits, if they all use townsquare.
  • SoftTalker 41 minutes ago
    Not sure how this is appealing at all. I see a bunch of stick figures moving rapidly and comments flashing too quickly to read. I gave up as it wasn't obvious at all what to do or how to particpate.
    • cauenapier 36 minutes ago
      The issue is that my site right now is too crowded giving this post reached a good position on HN.

      On regular days, this are much calmer. You can check other sites using the Townsquare on cauenapier.townsquare.com. Check out the map.

  • oceliker 31 minutes ago
    Reminds me of the old ff0000, sadly no longer active, but this is what it looked like: https://www.reddit.com/r/lost_websites/comments/11lao71/ff00...

    I had found it on StumbleUpon. We'd log in with friends and just fly around, explore, punch each other, chat with random people across the world on a surprisingly fluid multiplayer setting that was built to promote a web advertising agency (if I remember correctly).

    It was really ahead of its time. The old internet was so fun.

  • truemoose 28 minutes ago
    I love it, and I just want to say thanks for making this and releasing it. I jumped through the indieweb webring and already stumbled onto another site using it too. Despite what some others have said about the lack of permanence, this still feels like an old web treasure to me even if it didn't exist.
  • pflenker 34 minutes ago
    Reminds me of m favorite late 90s messenger, Odigo[0]. It had some sort of radar which showed you people who were visiting the same site. It sure had this town hall feel, but admittedly most sites were simply empty.

    [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odigo_Messenger

  • 0xkistu 1 hour ago
    Previously discussed: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48608570

    Really love the idea!

  • peab 20 minutes ago
    This is awesome
  • thomastjeffery 59 minutes ago
    Fun!

    People in a town square still have identities. They are just likely to not know each other.

    I think this is a significant part of a great idea. What it, and most/all other communication software is missing, is the ability to continue a conversation into a new context. It would be great to move a convo from the public square into a shop, then maybe share contact info to get together another day.

    • FinnKuhn 44 minutes ago
      > People in a town square still have identities. They are just likely to not know each other.

      I think that entirely depends on the size of the town. For a big city this is absolutely true, but in a small village you would expect to find at least a few familiar faces.

  • AndrewKemendo 1 hour ago
    Fun! There’s a lot of features there to play with and it acts as a real time view counter.

    Interestingly I used it then left without even reading the article

  • ranger_danger 1 hour ago
    Now this is cool! I'd love to see something like it on most web pages as a way to interact with like-minded people... but then I start thinking about all the ways it's going to be abused and get sad.
    • cauenapier 1 hour ago
      I'm the site author and creator of TownSquare. The only moment it got a bit abused it was during the first HN spike. But before and after that, everything was friendly.
      • evnp 30 minutes ago
        Love this idea and your creation of it. Unfortunately do think the parent's concerns are valid - at this moment on your site at least one person has set their name to something offensive so it shows up perpetually (under the street light). Anonymity+connectivity persists in bringing out the worst of our impulses, I guess...

        Do you think names are really necessary? Or could they take some other form than text, perhaps unicode chars chosen from a selection of abstract shapes? The wonderful https://www.tunera.xyz/fonts/teranoptia/ comes to mind.

        • nickradford 15 minutes ago
          teranoptia looks cool as hell, thanks for sharing!
      • Zak 25 minutes ago
        I think there might be some merit to a basic filter, perhaps some sort of timeout for obvious slurs. I see a few right now.