Presumably we'd also want some way to find people quickly - how to organize that? Some dimensions would include technology preferences, time/availability, stage of startup/work, one's One True Editor, etc.
Have you seen this spreadsheet of people looking for co-founders? http://spreadsheets0.google.com/ccc?key=t1_0CjyeF5QqMwgh6AFG...
Also, I think it'd be cool to have something almost like eHarmony for hackers. Matching hackers up with other hackers interested in working on the same types of projects.
I hadn't heard of Forrst.com before, so I've applied so I can check it out. I hadn't heard of techcofounder.com either, but there's no built in messaging system and it seems a little unorganized.
I just have some difficulties to imagine what it would need to look like to a) don't end up copying FB and b) not copying HN itself
So I'm on the edge on this one. FB et all don't interest me, this is interesting because of the (controlled, on-topic, interesting) contributions. How are you planning to build a social network with the same merits? Are you going to build a new, different Identi.ca? (which, imo, is a failure in terms of adoption, and they mostly targeted the "tech" demographic)
I'm going to brainstorm the next few days and maybe create a poll or website asking for input from my fellow hackers.
Joking aside, emailing and calling and meeting people really is a great form of communication. The barrier in this sense is a TRULY GREAT thing.
Also: Github.com for me is the most direct network that aligns with HN. On github you are what you contribute. That's beautiful.
Many people seem to think its a good idea in the realm of idealand. I truly doubt HN can be ported to a social network. Anyone I'd be interested in social-networking-it-up with is too damn busy to dick around with me on some casual website.
Maybe incorporate some of the ideas from this thread: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1514803