Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Bing has a ways to go before slaying Google

The chart below is the amount of blog posts that compare the new Microsoft search engine Bing to Google.

There are a couple of caveats, however -- Google has been around for seemingly forever now, at least in internet time. It is by far the largest search engine in the world, and anything that Google does creates buzz in the technology blogosphere. Also, any post that references Bing will invariably also mention Google (as I did in this post).

People are also trying to figure out what Google Wave will be, what it means for the internet and whether it is just another example of Google slowly becoming Skynet.

Also, ultimately, the only number that will matter is whether or not people use Bing. All I can say is that it is at least better than that epic trainwreck that was Cuil.

Keyword popularity across the Blogosphere
This chart illustrates how many times blog posts across the Blogosphere contained the following keywords.

Can social media networks stand in for real life friendships?

Paula Rice of Island City, Kentucky said that the social media network Eons gave her "a reason to keep on going” according to the New York Times.

Rice is 73, retired and was lonely.
“One of the greatest challenges or losses that we face as older adults, frankly, is not about our health, but it’s actually about our social network deteriorating on us, because our friends get sick, our spouse passes away, friends pass away, or we move,” said Joseph F. Coughlin, director of the AgeLab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
An interesting read.

I don't think that Obama will be getting an invitation to the Clinton's Christmas Party

Sure, President Barack Obama made Hillary Clinton his Secretary of State. But the infamous rift between Obama and the last Democratic President, Hillary's husband Bill Clinton, is still there.

And this, according to Taegan Goddard, probably won't help that ice thaw.

Speaking of Clinton, Obama said, "We had to figure out how to deal with a former president who was just lying, engaging in bald-faced lies."

And:
When Obama was asked by the author if Clinton got in his head, he replied: "Yes, but I got into his."
It's all in Renegade: The Making of a President by Richard Wolffe. The book was released today.

Twitter a one-way mode of communication?

Is Twitter a one-way mode of communication?

That's what a study from Harvard Business Publishing hypothesizes.

The study of 300,000 Twitter accounts found that that top ten percent most-prolific Twitter accounts accounted for 90 percent of all the Twitter posts. Which is amazing.

However, the study also show, "A typical Twitter user contributes very rarely. Among Twitter users, the median number of lifetime tweets per user is one."

This suggests, to me, that they didn't just do a poll of active accounts. There must have been a significant amount of accounts where people start an account, think, "I don't see what the fuss is about" and quit. Or they decide to shed the name and start a new account with a new name (even though it is incredibly easy to switch names in the "settings" menu).

The study writes:
To put Twitter in perspective, consider an unlikely analogue - Wikipedia. There, the top 15% of the most prolific editors account for 90% of Wikipedia's edits. In other words, the pattern of contributions on Twitter is more concentrated among the few top users than is the case on Wikipedia, even though Wikipedia is clearly not a communications tool. This implies that Twitter's resembles more of a one-way, one-to-many publishing service more than a two-way, peer-to-peer communication network.
I'm not so sure if a study of those "top ten percent" of Twitter accounts wouldn't prove otherwise.

It would be interesting to see how many of the tweets sent out where "@ replies," or replying to the original author.

Using Twitter in the classroom

One teacher at the University of Texas at Dallas has been utilizing Twitter in his teaching, according to an article in Read Write Web.
Rankin uses a weekly hashtag to organize comments, questions and feedback posted by students to Twitter during class. Some of the students have downloaded Tweetdeck to their computers, others post by SMS or by writing questions on a piece of paper. Rankin then projects a giant image of live Tweets in the front of the class for discussion and suggests that students refer back to the messages later when studying.
People are using Twitter for a number of different applications, many that the founders of Twitter surely never anticipated.