Same here. Actually, I’ve found very, very few people from my high school class on FB. There are some from college, but not very many. A very good friend of mine IRL surmises that there’s an “age curve” of FB users: The younger you are, the more apt you’ll be active there. Not that you’d be inactive if you were in your 40s, but 40s on up isn’t, according to my friend, FB’s major demographic.
I have no idea if there’s any truth to this, but it’s an interesting theory.
A lot of 40-somethings get FB accounts to keep track of their teenagers, like my sister did. As a result, she was contacted by her high school boy friend which was a little interesting.
I am fundamentally a lazy person. It is much easier than writing letters. I have my privacy settings high enough that I do not come up if you search, and only my family can see the few pictures I post (which are old family pictures. My cousins and I are posting what we have so we can make copies if we want). I do not have an email address, phone number, location, job, education, or anything like that available for anyone to see. My friends list is not visible to anyone who can see my posts. I use it for what I want, and I’m happy with that. I first got on it when my daughter was away at college and would post pictures from school. At that time you needed an edu suffix on your email address in order to get an account, so I used my husband’s account and signed up.
Since Facebook doesn’t really advertise and it’s only content consists of what it’s members post online, it doesn’t really “target” any particular demographic. Your tendency to want to go on Facebook would largely be a product of a) your comfort level with technology and b) the likelihood of people you know already being on Facebook. But since Facebook did start in 2004 with specific college campuses, it stands to reason that the initial adopters would be young people. Older people would gradually adopt it as young people grew older and their personal and professional networks broadened.
Love it. Got hooked on a week ago, and set up a quick MySpace page to host music and share with “associates.” It’s just kind of fun, and it’s like your own private SDMB. Yeah, I “friended” my Mom, and defriended her, and refriended her, but it goes with the territory, I aspose.
I didn’t even have a way to share my (few) recordings which I somewhat need for my “business” and was always too lazy to do MySpace except for little bands and stuff. Now I still don’t have much in digital, (word of mouth), but it’s easy to “network” just by checking in with my real friends IR: every so often.