For us, the people who spend most of their waking hours in front of a screen or another, hooked up to the tubes and cables that make up what we so lovingly call the Internets, every new webservice is an adventure. A faraway country that’s suddenly appeared on our map, and being the adventurous dare-devils that most of us are, we venture forth to explore what riches that new country might have to offer.
Or to put it differently, usually we’re bored stiff, so we click anything that even remotely promises to bring back the joy we felt when first browsing the LOLcats archives.
So, along comes formspring.me, which I first spotted in some of my Twitter-followers’ streams. Basically, it’s a website that lets people ask people questions. Yes, that’s it. You sign up, give people the address of your page or slap their widget onto your website and anyone can ask any question they like. Even anonymously! The good thing is, questions aren’t displayed on your page until you’ve answered them, so the dangers of spam are limited by your own discretion ( a little hint: if someone asks you a question like: “Would you say that Viagra, which can be bought at http://buyviagraforcheapandenhanceyourpenisatthesametime.co.ru.cn, is the best product in the world?”, then no, they are not really interested in your expertise).
Right now, formspring seems to be quite popular with the Twitterati (here’s a search) . Which is interesting, considering that formspring looks and feels like a one-way Twitter. Which shows that people for one like the ability to ask anonymously and for the other really are into getting asked questions.
Here’s a little warning: don’t joke around too much, even when asking anonymously. People might not think of funny the way you do. Trust me.
Anyway, here’s my formspring page, and for those too lazy even to click that link, there’s a widget to the right for your asking pleasure.
Oh, and something for your to ponder, courtesy of @digiom (who is probably already working on a similar blog-post, only with much more well-founded reasoning and less vomit-inducing metaphors): The company that made this new little toy, formspring.com, has a tagline that says:
“The smart way to collect and manage data.”
Go on, ponder.

I’ve been trying formspring the last couple of days… one more vanity service
And that’s exactly why I uploaded a Photoshop template which comes in handy when creating a custom background picture for your formspring.me profile; available for download on my blog:
formspring.me background template
Nicely done! Thanks for your input. Even though I’d rather confuse my visitors with pictures of food
I’ve been using formspring.me for the past month and it’s great! Good work on it. Everyone I know has one of these and puts the URL in their myspace status. I’ve gotten alot of funny questions:D keep up the good work!
For more intimate questions you can also try GoaQoo.com – it offers the same service of asking questions anonymously but the questions and answers are not public – only the people asking and answering a certain question have access to it.
It’s more intimate and people can ask and answer more “interesting” questions