In essence, it was the first niche computer-dating service

In essence, it was the first niche computer-dating service

Over the years since Tarr first starting sending out his questionnaires, computer dating has evolved

The computer-dating pioneers were happy to play up to the image of the omniscient machine – and were already wary of any potential stigma attached to their businesses. “Some romanticists complain that we’re too commercial,” Tarr told reporters. “But we’re not trying to take the love out of love; we’re just trying to make it more efficient. We supply everything but the spark.” In turn, the perceived wisdom of the machine opened up new possibilities for competition in the nascent industry, as start-up services touted the ins over others. Contact, Match’s greatest rival, was founded by MIT graduate student David DeWan and ran on a Honeywell 200 computer, developed in response to IBM’s 1401 and operating two to three times faster. DeWan made the additional claim that Contact’s questions were more sophisticated than Match’s nationwide efforts, because they were restricted to elite college students.

Most importantly, it has become online dating. And with each of these developments – through the internet, home computing, broadband, smartphones, fruzo review and location services – the turbulent business and the occasionally dubious science of computer-aided matching has evolved too. Online dating continues to hold up a mirror not only to the mores of society, which it both reflects, and shapes, but to our attitudes to technology itself.

The American National Academy of Sciences reported in 2013 that more than a third of people who met their partner online, and half of those met on dating sites. The rest met through chatrooms, online games, and elsewhere. Preliminary studies also showed that people who met online were slightly less likely to divorce and claimed to be happier in their marriages. The latest figures from online analytics company Comscore show that the UK is not far behind, with 5.7 million people visiting dating sites every month, and 49 million across Europe as a whole, or 12% of the total population. Continue reading “In essence, it was the first niche computer-dating service”