Old Version Of Fb
Your news feed was a sacred, unbroken timeline of what your friends actually did, in the order they did it. No "top stories." No promoted posts. No "your friend liked this three hours ago." You saw everything, and you saw it all. If you missed something, you scrolled down—and you actually reached the bottom.
The old status box demanded one thing: "[Name] is..." You filled in the blank. It forced humility. You couldn't just type "So tired." You had to write, "John is so tired." It felt like a friend speaking, not a brand broadcasting. old version of fb
The design wasn't sleek—it was functional. And that functionality bred authenticity. You couldn't hide behind a filtered story or a curated grid. Your embarrassing tagged photos from 2007 sat right there, side by side with your angsty status updates about homework. Your news feed was a sacred, unbroken timeline