This artigo was last updated on 25 October 2007, and was inspired por Temptasia's artigo link (sic).
In addition to the categories of user that Temptasia mentioned, I think that there are multiple "levels" of fãs in a given spot (these are generalities and not meant to be an analysis of any particular user). I myself fit each of these categories in different spots, and I think that that might apply to others on the site, too. When I'm in a spot, I tend to think everyone else has the same level of enthusiasm/invovlement that I do, and I don't think that's realistic. Here's my quick break-down:
* the wild fan: this person submits the majority of the content for a spot, posting multiple links daily. This person is obsessed with sharing what he/she knows concerning the spot topic, or at least with posting material related to the spot topic. When you see an update to a spot in your "My Updates" section of your perfil page, this is the first person you think it might be, even before clicking on the link. Often this results in that person not interacting very much with others' material: not commenting or rating very much, because they're so busy uploading mais links!
* the committed fan: this person uploads some content but is also quite involved in commenting/rating others' content, usually checking the spot daily for updates/responses. He/she will jump eagerly at any new update listed in the "My Updates" section, rating quickly and adding comments (even if it's just a "cool" or "I didn't like that"), and often participates heavily in various threads of that spot's forum.
* the casual fan: this person saw some link (an image, a fórum thread, a featured spot link, a video link) to particular spot and said "Oh, hey, I'm kinda interested in that" and added him/herself as a fan. The person will occasionally visit the spot, then only sometimes views content, but only has mild interest in the spot's topic and so doesn't feel compelled to rate and/or comment.
Like I said, most people that I've seen are different user "levels" in different spots. For me, I'm a wild fã in the link, a committed fã in the link, and a casual fã in the link (as well as many others).
Similarly, there are different types of user behavior. This is mais along the lines of Temptasia's article, because the types apply to users in general, rather than fãs of a particular spot, but rather than talking about how much they use the site - her artigo covered that - these types are some of the different ways I've observed how users use Fanpop.
* the global users: these people are casual fãs of many, many spots. They view a lot of content and spend most of the time looking at the "recent updates" in their profiles, just browsing new stuff in those spots. When they aren't doing that, they're browsing the site at random, looking for new spots to join.
* the focussed users: these people are fãs of very few spots, but tend to be committed or wild fãs in each of them. These people may have created one or two of those spots, and will volubly and frequently wonder why no one else is contributing to them.
* the pioneer users: these people is constantly figuring out new spots that haven't yet been created, and then creates them. They do little mais than plant the flag for queen and country (and hopefully create a banner and logo) before moving on to the seguinte new spot, however.
* the philanthropist users: these people are fãs not just of certain topics, but also of the fanpop user interface, and spend their time adding content to aleatório spots as their fancy takes them, knowing that any contribution to a spot is a benefit to that spot.
* the family users: these people joined fanpop not particularly to cadastrar-se any existing spots, but instead to keep in touch with family members who are using the site. They tend to be fãs of and/or create spots dedicated to a particular user, where they can share fotografias and video of their family with other friends and family members.
* the lurking users: The primary consumers of the content on Fanpop, these users cadastrar-se the site not to be able to rate links, post comments or even select picks from questions. Instead they cadastrar-se simply to create a list of spots for which they are fans. They then follow all the atualizações for those spots assiduously, leitura every article, viewing every image, watching every video.
Now this is in no way meant to be an exhaustive list of the different ways people interact with Fanpop, merely some of the mais common behaviors I've seen in users since I started in June 2006. People are, of course, much mais complicated than simple labels like these, and often will exhibit different behaviors depending on the dia of the week (schedule), mood, time of day, and level of inspiration. Some times, I suspect, we all want to just consume (view, watch, read, play) what others have posted, because constant posting (particularly for wild users) can get to seeming like...well, work. So these behaviors ebb and flow, and aren't meant to be applied as a permanent tag on someone: "That guy's just a family user" or "She's really just a focussed user on this spot", but rather behaviors that folks demonstrate from time to time. There are likely others, too, which you have observed and I haven't. If so, I'd be interested in leitura about them in the comments, below.
In addition to the categories of user that Temptasia mentioned, I think that there are multiple "levels" of fãs in a given spot (these are generalities and not meant to be an analysis of any particular user). I myself fit each of these categories in different spots, and I think that that might apply to others on the site, too. When I'm in a spot, I tend to think everyone else has the same level of enthusiasm/invovlement that I do, and I don't think that's realistic. Here's my quick break-down:
* the wild fan: this person submits the majority of the content for a spot, posting multiple links daily. This person is obsessed with sharing what he/she knows concerning the spot topic, or at least with posting material related to the spot topic. When you see an update to a spot in your "My Updates" section of your perfil page, this is the first person you think it might be, even before clicking on the link. Often this results in that person not interacting very much with others' material: not commenting or rating very much, because they're so busy uploading mais links!
* the committed fan: this person uploads some content but is also quite involved in commenting/rating others' content, usually checking the spot daily for updates/responses. He/she will jump eagerly at any new update listed in the "My Updates" section, rating quickly and adding comments (even if it's just a "cool" or "I didn't like that"), and often participates heavily in various threads of that spot's forum.
* the casual fan: this person saw some link (an image, a fórum thread, a featured spot link, a video link) to particular spot and said "Oh, hey, I'm kinda interested in that" and added him/herself as a fan. The person will occasionally visit the spot, then only sometimes views content, but only has mild interest in the spot's topic and so doesn't feel compelled to rate and/or comment.
Like I said, most people that I've seen are different user "levels" in different spots. For me, I'm a wild fã in the link, a committed fã in the link, and a casual fã in the link (as well as many others).
Similarly, there are different types of user behavior. This is mais along the lines of Temptasia's article, because the types apply to users in general, rather than fãs of a particular spot, but rather than talking about how much they use the site - her artigo covered that - these types are some of the different ways I've observed how users use Fanpop.
* the global users: these people are casual fãs of many, many spots. They view a lot of content and spend most of the time looking at the "recent updates" in their profiles, just browsing new stuff in those spots. When they aren't doing that, they're browsing the site at random, looking for new spots to join.
* the focussed users: these people are fãs of very few spots, but tend to be committed or wild fãs in each of them. These people may have created one or two of those spots, and will volubly and frequently wonder why no one else is contributing to them.
* the pioneer users: these people is constantly figuring out new spots that haven't yet been created, and then creates them. They do little mais than plant the flag for queen and country (and hopefully create a banner and logo) before moving on to the seguinte new spot, however.
* the philanthropist users: these people are fãs not just of certain topics, but also of the fanpop user interface, and spend their time adding content to aleatório spots as their fancy takes them, knowing that any contribution to a spot is a benefit to that spot.
* the family users: these people joined fanpop not particularly to cadastrar-se any existing spots, but instead to keep in touch with family members who are using the site. They tend to be fãs of and/or create spots dedicated to a particular user, where they can share fotografias and video of their family with other friends and family members.
* the lurking users: The primary consumers of the content on Fanpop, these users cadastrar-se the site not to be able to rate links, post comments or even select picks from questions. Instead they cadastrar-se simply to create a list of spots for which they are fans. They then follow all the atualizações for those spots assiduously, leitura every article, viewing every image, watching every video.
Now this is in no way meant to be an exhaustive list of the different ways people interact with Fanpop, merely some of the mais common behaviors I've seen in users since I started in June 2006. People are, of course, much mais complicated than simple labels like these, and often will exhibit different behaviors depending on the dia of the week (schedule), mood, time of day, and level of inspiration. Some times, I suspect, we all want to just consume (view, watch, read, play) what others have posted, because constant posting (particularly for wild users) can get to seeming like...well, work. So these behaviors ebb and flow, and aren't meant to be applied as a permanent tag on someone: "That guy's just a family user" or "She's really just a focussed user on this spot", but rather behaviors that folks demonstrate from time to time. There are likely others, too, which you have observed and I haven't. If so, I'd be interested in leitura about them in the comments, below.