
Lisa: What is the newest trend in online dating? Is there an online health parallel?

Lisa: What is the newest trend in online dating? Is there an online health parallel?
Mark: Niche dating sites are springing up for every imaginable niche. Support groups, similarly: whatever the illness, there's a support group online, which can be of tremendous comfort and provide sharing of useful, life-saving information.
Lisa: Online dating is trying new approaches to matching people. What works best, in your opinion?
Mark: Personality profiling sites aim to go one step further than typical dating sites. Typical dating sites allow search. So you can find people who meet your wants and needs. But people don't really know what they want, until they see it. Personality profiling sites like eHarmony allow people to ‘not fall in love with the wrong person.' They do the hard work of fixing people up, and use the best information available today, on psychology, sociology, anthropology, a la matchmaking.
Lisa: Do you personally try out online dating sites?
Mark: I prefer meeting people in real life, at parties and through friends of friends. I love speed dating, parties, and meeting people in real life. I'm not so keen on internet dating. But I'm married, so I'm off the market.
Lisa: Which features do you like best in sites?

Lisa: Do you go online when you need health information? Can you recount a recent time - why you went online, what you found, and if you sought professional care?
Mark: I've not been ill, ever, really. But when I am, I'm heading online to check what my doctor tells me.
Lisa: What can online health learn from online dating?
Mark: I'd love to see a search engine that matches people with other people in support groups, like them. Same illness, same geographic area.
How to handle difficult people.