Monster.com founder launches senior citizen social networking site
Monster.com founder Jeff Taylor launching a new social networking site for senior citizens. The site, Eons.com, is designed for anyone aged 50 and up and will focus on tips on love, finances and health. Members can also create and share their important moments and pictures with an online "Lifemap".
Taylor wants Eons to be a pratical and friendly place for older people and you won’t see any Myspace-like videos and juvenile commentary. Members can find tips on healthy living and can even see how long they will live with a Longevity Calculator.
Speaking of longevity, Eons will have an obituary search that it claims will examine over 77 million obituary entries. Members can also create "death alerts" and get emails if a friend has died.
Several sponsors ranging from hotel chains, like Harrah’s Entertainment and Hyatt Corporation, to life insurance companies have partnered up with Eons. Senior citizens are a lucrative demographic for companies to go after and Metlife recently released a study saying the baby boomer generation has a combine $2 trillion dollar worth of annual spending power.
Eons.com claims that 71% of its members are between 50 and 60 years old. Prospective members fill out a short form that includes a date of birth. People that are younger than 50 years old are immediately rejected.
- AMD and IBM try next-gen power saving architecture for 'System x' servers
- Software meshes photos to create 3D landscape
- 3-D software for 'virtual surgery'
- DDR prices on the rise - Isuppli
- Watch TV by the pool - company markets weather-resistant televisions
- Nvidia intros 80 billion pixels/s graphics machine
- Airmagnet ships VoFi Analyzer
- Educating kids with video games - a laudable, but doomed, idea
- Firefox hits 200 million downloads
- Intel unveils NOR flash products for low-cost handsets
- Panel makers evaluating price increase for 19" widescreen panels
- Nvidia to launch MCP61S IGP chipset by end of August
- Dell halts PDA development
- The AOL transition begins as e-mail, other premium services become free
- Rambus "unlawfully" obtained monopoly power, says FTC
- Las Vegas braces for computer security gurus
- Hybrid HD DVD / Blu-ray players appear unlikely after LG backs off
- US Court publishes trial exhibits of Zacarias Moussaoui case online




