Oh OK I get you now. How about AmiSpace?

It seems to me like the internet is going the direction of being split into three things. 1. Google (search/video). 2. Digg/del.icio.us and all that crap, and 3. Myspace/Facebook.
I was just (in a maybe not quite so obvious way) saying that such links aren't really going to do much but help this situation.
All three of those are one in the same: social networking. It is the current up and coming trend of the internet and it is bringing more and more users online for longer thanks to faster internet connections. So yes you are correct, it is the direction the internet is heading, and quickly.

Everyone wants their own little personal space online and sites allowing them to add information about themselves without the need to know how to code for the technology working it all in the background is perfect for most standard computer/internet users. Likewise people love to talk about the things they love, be it through written word or video. More and more sites are now allowing them this opportunity again without them needing to know how the technology works. Even classicamiga has been doing this since the relaunch with the ability for all members to add reviews and comments to all site content, as well as setup profiles with images and other personal information and opinions.

User generated content is the future.

Another example that really shows how this approach works has to be Wikipedia. Completely user added information and look at how large and widely used this central resource now is. And even the Amiga site Exotica has now gone down this route.

BTW, just out of interest, what happened to the idea of bookmarking a site in the browser's own bookmarks? I remember in the past seeing lots of sites which might have a little link saying 'Bookmark this site'. now that seems to have all but dissapeared, in favour of a long and constantly growing list of internet based bookinging sites, with few not even giving you the option of bookmarking it on your own browser.
Many people use shared computers, or more than one computer, in their homes, at work, at university, in public places like libraries and cafes. But they want access to a central location at all times for their bookmarked websites. If you just used a browser's standard bookmarking facilities you only ever have access to the sites bookmarked on that computer. Using bookmarking sites means you always have access to them all wherever you are.

In addition these sites help out the sites being bookmarked. In addition to the central bookmarking facilities these sites offer, it is a smart way to get the users of the site to do a search engine robots job for it. People bookmark sites, the site collects all of these bookmarks and can instantly see how many people are bookmarking each and therefore how popular a site is, and in addition users access the bookmarks via their site so they collect even more information about how often each visitor is going to each site they have bookmarked. It is a really smart way for search engines to collect data without needing to code smart robots that need to trawl the internet looking for the sites themselves. Then once the site has the bookmarked site information they can then send their spiders out to collect a complete picture of a site's content.

So social bookmarking sites are very useful in search engine optimisation to aid a site being logged properly on search engines, and people finding the site in search results. So in effect everyone wins.