Should we be so upset about the loss of MSN Messenger?

Date
3 September 2014

This week Editor Liv Siddall addresses the world’s distraught reaction to the announcement that MSN Messenger will terminate after 15 years in operation, and wonders if we should get so nostalgic and wet-eyed over technology.

I often think about what the world’s headlines and Twitter feeds will be like when the Beano finally holds up its little hands and admits defeat – there will be cries of outrage, people pointing fingers and mourning a lost nugget of their past. Problem is, none of these people ranting about it will have actually bought a Beano for about the last 20 years.

Similar feelings arose in me when I heard last week of the demise of MSN Messenger. The initial feeling of “NOOOO!” was soon overtaken by the incredulous realisation that it has actually still been going all these years – who the hell has been using it? I’m not going to bore you with a bunch of “remember how you used to put song lyrics as your profile name?” or, “remember when you used to sign in and out again so the person you fancied knew you were online?” – I’ll leave that to Buzzfeed.

What I do want to address though is that I am 25, and I’m pretty sure I was in “the” MSN Messenger generation. A lot of my friends and co-workers of a similar age have expressed sorrow and nostalgia for its demise which, if you think about it, is a bit weird. MSN Messenger was a basic, rather ugly tool that was hosted by Microsoft in order for you to chat online with friends pre-Facebook and everyone having a phone – it wasn’t a family member or a much-loved celebrity.

After probably not even thinking about it for a decade it seems odd for people to get riled up about something terminating. What it does hint at is the amount of people between 20 and 30 who are now starting to form serious bonds with technology having been breastfed by it as a teenager and then never actually weaned off it.

The BBC even got their technology reporter Dave Lee to write an obituary for MSN Messenger! As if it was a person. You’ve seen how inconsolable your friends are when they lose their phone, or worse an important file or entire digital music library. Are we getting a little too attached to technology? The turnaround of old and new tech is increasing incredibly fast – even the whole scrolling website format is getting stale and that’s only been going for a few months.

Should we be nostalgic for technology or should we just move with the times? MSN was a good friend once upon a time, but I probably wouldn’t bother meeting it for a pint now, or attending its funeral to be honest.

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About the Author

Liv Siddall

Liv joined It’s Nice That as an intern in 2011 and worked across online, print and events, and was latterly Features Editor before leaving in May 2015.

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