Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts

Monday, February 7, 2011

Why Some Twitter Posts Catch On, and Some Don't

At New York Times:

AMID the talk last week of a Facebook revolution across the Middle East, Americans and other English speakers took to Twitter — to post about their love lives.

Hashtags — the community-driven shorthand used to identify conversation themes — like “icantdateyou” and “worstpickuplines” were vastly more popular a few days ago than ones like “Egyptians” or “jan25,” a reference to Day 1 of the Egyptian protests. In just one hour last Tuesday, “icantdateyou” racked up nearly 274,000 mentions on Twitter, with posts like “icantdateyou if all you wanna do is fuss” and “icantdateyou if you look like your brother.”

Alas, poor “Mubarak” rated fewer than 11,000 during the same hour. (Many Egyptians could not post on Twitter because their government had temporarily cut off most Internet and cellphone service.)

Sure, many of us are more inclined to toss off frivolous posts than politically charged ones. But a new study of hashtags offers some insight into how and why some topics become popular quickly online while others don’t.

People generally pass on the latest conversational idioms — like “cantlivewithout” or “dontyouhate” — the first few times they see them on Twitter, or they never adopt them at all, according to the study by computer scientists. The researchers analyzed the 500 most popular hashtags among more than three billion messages posted on Twitter from August 2009 to January 2010.

“Idioms are like a sugar rush,” explains Jon Kleinberg, a professor of computer science at Cornell and a co-author of the study. “You see it once, you either use it or you don’t, but the rush wears off.”

More contentious themes like politics take longer to catch on, the researchers found. People tend to wait until they have seen a more polarizing phrase — like “sarahpalin” or “hcr,” short for health care reform — four, five or six times on Twitter before posting it themselves.

We already know that people often influence one another’s behavior. That is the monkey-see-monkey-do premise behind advertising. And it may seem intuitive that different kinds of information spread differently on the Web.
More at the link.

Frankly, I haven't the slightest interest in those throwaway hashtags, and while I find it boring sometimes, there's still nothing like Twitter to get real-time information.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

The Death of Blogging

I noticed the other day, with some interest, Chris Bowers' announcement that Open Left, the far-left progressive blog, was shutting down. I'd already noticed that Bowers had migrated to Daily Kos, and no explanation was needed: more readers, and more exposure. I didn't think too much of it beyond that. And then I read Ben Smith's post, where he wrote:
There's been a bit written recently on the death of blogs, and while there will -- I hope -- remain space for some, there's little doubt that the online world of politics is no longer limited to this form ... Some of the older blogs on right and left are still thriving, while others -- like TPM and the Hot Air bloggers -- have worked to turn themselves into broader news platforms. But the form now feels a little quaint.
So, the death of blogs. I hadn't actually seen too much on that. Or, mostly, what I have seen and written about is the fascination with new media, especially Facebook and Twitter. But I just found a report on the death of blogs at New York Observer, "The End of Blogging." Folks can read it at the link. All of this is mostly a matter of definition. Blogging per se isn't going anywhere. Twitter is micro blogging. It's the hippest medium right now, but it may well be replaced with some new application or publishing format soon enough. The larger issue is the future of news publishing altogether. Folks might check James Rainey's piece yesterday on the SoCal newspaper industry: "Consolidation seen as inevitable for Southern California's newspapers." The dead-tree news model is nearly a thing of the past. Consumers get their news online nowadays, and those formats best able to attract advertising revenue will keep publishing. My sense is that, yeah, reverse-chronology blogs are someone quaint, as Ben Smith notes, but the power of blogging remains as great as ever. Top bloggers breaking top stories will survive. And the numbers will include a lot more than those mentioned by Ben Smith, who, incidently, made his own "quaint" blogging comment on a blog. Perhaps folks will just shift over to the online newspaper format. Think Daily Caller or Huffington Post, or on a smaller platform, Maggie's Notebook, NewsReal, or PA Pundits – International. And then there's Althouse. She keeps plugging away on Blogger, and if it's good enough for her it's good enough for me! I'll be keeping American Power running, whether on Blogger or Wordpress, a switch that remains in the contemplation mode. I'm also in talks for my own blog at NewsReal, which means I might be joining the David Horowitz publishing house as a formal member. Again, that's just in the discussion phase, but I'll know more after CPAC next week, where I'll be hooking up with some folks.

Meanwhile, perhaps
The Other McCain might weigh in on the topic.

And for a reminder on why I'll be blogging somewhere, no matter what, head back over to Open Left, where Daniel De Groot bids farewell with a parting attack on the right, "
Farewell thought: Conservatism is still the enemy":

Shortly after Kerry's loss in 2004, at MyDD, Chris wrote "Conservatism is our enemy" which I think is the first time I ever encountered a direct ideological assault on conservatism itself. Along with Phil Agre's rightly famous essay on the subject, it began me on a road and mission to better understanding this beast. Everything I have learned to date from then continues to bolster Chris' original thesis. Conservativism is still the primary enemy of progress, justice, fairness and widespread happiness for humanity. It remains a destructive and corrosive force on the institutions of democracy and the single biggest obstacle to world peace ....

These fights will have to go on. Conservatism is a destructive system of hierarchy and zero-sum power seeking that has no place in the running of a modern society. It is some kind of evolutionary anachronism, the ingrained desire to accumulate power and resources to the exclusion of "the other" against times of need in Hobbes' jungle. Since about 1850 we (in the West at least) have lived in the world of surplus resources where there really is enough stuff for everyone to go around, but still we live with about half the population intuitively working the politics of a Malthusian state where every hamburger you eat is one of my kids going hungry. Even today in the shadow of the Great Recession, world GDP per capita (PPP) stands at over $10,000 per year. About 1 billion live on less than $400 a year. Another billion live on less than $750 a year. Clearly there is enough to go around, we just suck at distribution. Is it really so crazy to imagine we could get those bottom 2 billion up to $1000 or $2000 a year?

In the field of pursuing the ideal human society, liberalism is the science of pursuing human well being. It combines the empiricism and rationalism of science with the goal of maximizing human happiness. The process is iterative and the specific means change as well meaning ideas are found wanting, and as science improves our understanding of humans themselves and what it takes to make them happy. There is no other school of thought that both seeks to improve the lot of all, and actually can do it. The ultimate goal of liberalism is that we should not need the word "liberalism" because no one would need a special word to describe the self-evident way people determine solutions to societal problems. That's what liberalism is, and why it must win or all humanity will fall back into ruin, scarcity, ignorance and fear. We live in a world with plenty of those things, but also a world where solutions to them are in reach, which was never true any time before. Après liberalism, le déluge.

Look, that's not "liberalism" — that's radical progressivism. And as long as these f**kers keep agitating for the neo-Stalinist revolution, I'll be out pushing back, smacking these freaks down like a whack-a-mole.

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Piers Morgan's Trash Talk on Twitter

A prediction for 2011: microblogging gets hotter than blogging.



And at The Blaze, "
CNN Host Resorts to Name-Calling in Twitter Bash Fest."

Piers Morgan

RELATED: This taps into what Felix Salmon was saying earlier, although contrary to Piers Morgan's sensibilities, I think hierarchies are archaic on Twitter.



And Piers Morgan's Twitter page is here.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Monday, August 16, 2010

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Twitter People Power: With a Price Tag – #Bloggers #WebDevelopers

Couple of related and significant news items:

At USA Today, "
Twitter power: Learning from ourselves, in real time":

Once derided as a peddler of infantile missives ("My latte is cold!"), the service has revealed itself to be an accurate barometer of mass culture. Today, if something isn't tweeted, did it happen?

"Twitter has become the world's water cooler," says Adam Ostrow, editor of the social media blog Mashable. "It's a place where you can hear what millions are saying and feel, unbiased and in that moment."

Celebrities were among the first to recognize Twitter's connective power: Former American Idoljudge Paula Abdul abdicated her seat in a tweet to fans, and singer Erykah Badu tweeted right through her youngest daughter's birth.

Now devotees range from CEOs to average Joes, all chatting in a digital town square with the power to aid Haiti with an avalanche of donation pledges or make 16-year-old pop phenom Justin Bieber a global sensation.

And perhaps in the ultimate crowning of the medium, William Shatner will play the father in a CBS sitcom based on the real-life Twitter feed of Justin Halpern, who tweets out his dad's rants to 1.3 million followers. Shatner announced the news on Twitter, of course.

With this wacky soup of meaningful and mundane info, it's no wonder the Library of Congress plans to archive all the world's tweets. The transfer of data is about six months off as the library assembles a staff to curate and disseminate the information largely to scholars, library spokesman Matt Raymond says.

"It's about having a record of what both the first-person participants in history and its spectators were saying," Raymond says. "Wouldn't it be amazing to have the broad and immediate reaction of people to Pearl Harbor?"

No question. But for most people, Twitter's charm is the way it cuts to the social media chase.
More at the link.

But what's more interesting is the related news on Twitter's shift to monetization, which could affect big bloggers as well as tiny Internet advertisers. See, PC World, "
Twitter Gets Serious About Getting Paid," and especially, All Things Digital, "Twitter’s Free Love Era Comes to an End: Time for Developers and Publishers to Pay Up":
So is Twitter only interested in really big publishers who use Twitter? Not necessarily. I asked Costolo about the Huffington Post, which has prominently embraced Twitter and uses it frequently to fill out its pages. Like this Twitter widget under a grisly story about a gored bullfighter (careful!).

That’s probably fine, Costolo said. But what about Huffpo’s “Twitter editions,” which are primarily made up of tweets? I’ve asked Costolo about those in a follow-up email, but haven’t heard back yet. My gut: He’s not sure yet. Which is going to make for lots of interesting conversations in the coming weeks and months.
For all it's fancy left-wing pedigree, HuffPo's still basically a blog – and big outfits like that will be paying percentages on the revenue they make off Twitter.

RELATED: Follow American Power on Twitter.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Starbucks Blogging

I'm not yet quite as skilled as Ann Althouse, where she's always got a unique café location from which to blog, for example, today "At the Living Roof Café ..."

And "café" is no metephor in my case (as is seemingly true with Ann sometimes), as I'm blogging from the Starbucks at Culver and Walnut in Irvine. The tables are a little cramped, but it's a nice spot with a lovely view from my window seat:

Photobucket

Photobucket

If you look carefully at the top picture, that's Exurban Jon's blog. He's reporting that the Lilith Fair concert in Phoenix, on July 8th, has been cancelled as part of the economic boycott of Arizona's SB 1070.

I found Jon's post via
Instapundit, and while there I clicked to follow him on Twitter. He's in AZ, and I'll be out that way next weekend for the May 29th Stand With Arizona event.

I'll probably have a couple more Starbucks posts at that time as well!

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Caleb Howe Doesn't Like Roger Ebert

Folks gotta read this, "I Don’t Like Roger Ebert." (Via Memeorandum.)

I just tweeted @ CalebHowe the other day, so it's strangely funny kinda coincidence. And the fits of apoplexy caused by this are simply astounding.

Even better is that Ebert couldn't let things go, wrote
a big follow-up slamming his critics, and gets slammed in return.

BONUS EXTRA: Behold
a radical secular demonologist take (hypocritical) exception to the right's clever use of (turnaround) demonology.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Who R U Follow'g on Twitter?

I've been really warming up to Twitter over this past few weeks. (I think I've finally figured out the power of it...) The Scott Brown campaign was made tremendously immediate by following all my conservative tweeps; and in fact, William Jacobson's written on that today, "The First American Twitter Revolution." But I especially like how Twitter is basically a notification service for what others are doing online. I recently starting following Karen Alloy, and if her name doesn't ring a bell ... well, you'll be pretty familiar with her in no time, since I'm going to be posting her YouTubes whenever I can. She's hot and funny, and that's a hard combination to beat:

Did you watch it? There is a message in there, and it's for R.S. McCain!! Don't forget to thank people for hitting your tip jar!!

Oh yeah ... I blame
Jim Treacher for getting me hooked on Karen Alloy!!

Sunday, June 21, 2009

RightwingSparkle on Twitter

I love Kathleen's tweet:
Please. If you are liberal, don't follow me. You won't enjoy it and twitter is my happy place. I argue enough on my blogs.
And check out RightWing Sparkle!

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Twitter and Change

It was one of those times when the stars aligned around a particular phenomenon.

Getting away from blogging for a while, I went out last night to the Barnes and Noble at Irvine's Spectrum Center. While there, I read Time's recent cover story, "
How Twitter Will Change the Way We Live."

The technology's impressive, and I've been meaning to get all signed up for some time; but I was impressed with the discussion that placed
Twitter in the context of American entrepreneurial dynamism - and especially in the context of economic innovation and first-mover advantages in international political economy:
The speed with which users have extended Twitter's platform points to a larger truth about modern innovation. When we talk about innovation and global competitiveness, we tend to fall back on the easy metric of patents and Ph.D.s. It turns out the U.S. share of both has been in steady decline since peaking in the early '70s. (In 1970, more than 50% of the world's graduate degrees in science and engineering were issued by U.S. universities.) Since the mid-'80s, a long progression of doomsayers have warned that our declining market share in the patents-and-Ph.D.s business augurs dark times for American innovation. The specific threats have changed. It was the Japanese who would destroy us in the '80s; now it's China and India.

But what actually happened to American innovation during that period? We came up with America Online, Netscape, Amazon, Google, Blogger, Wikipedia, Craigslist, TiVo, Netflix, eBay, the iPod and iPhone, Xbox, Facebook and Twitter itself. Sure, we didn't build the Prius or the Wii, but if you measure global innovation in terms of actual lifestyle-changing hit products and not just grad students, the U.S. has been lapping the field for the past 20 years.
I just thought this passage was so cool from the perspective of political science.

So coming home last night, I did a little blogging and then signed up. My Twitter username is "
AmPowerBlog." I couldn't have joined at a more interesting time. As I was playing around with it, all the big news was coming in from Iran, and the best stuff was on Twitter. I mean really, as I noted today, the biggest names in journalism - especially CNN - went basically AWOL.

Kathleen at
RightWingSparkle summed up what it was like last night:
I stayed up until 3am last night reading the tweets on twitter from Iran. It was just fascinating to me that while the Iranian government was trying to block the people from Iran from letting the world know what was happening by trying to shut down all social networking, the people were still managing to tweet and post video on Youtube.
Then, this afternoon, Serr8d linked to an awesome comment at Protein Wisdom regarding the dymamism and creative destruction at the frontiers of social networking:


Here’s my social media exegesis: Mass communications tools, since Gutenberg, have shared a fundamental and foundational commonality; they’re all top-down hierarchies that necessarily result in a unidirectional, linear, deterministic flow of information. The information promulgated through those tools is just that: promulgated. There can be no realistic expectation that the audience can participate. Letters to the editor, for example, are strictly moderated and therefore inauthentic replacements for the kind of communication that typifies natural human interactions.

And these tools have long since jumped the shark. Ask any advertiser and they’ll tell you about the waning effectiveness of TV. @themediaisdying is a twitter user documenting the death of traditional media organizations. Witness the RIAA and MPAA thrashing about in a futile effort to maintain the apparatus of their top-down, breadth-first information promulgating structures ....

In very short order, Twitter will, in my estimation, eclipse Google. Let me offer an example. I arrive in Los Angeles and find myself with time to explore. I consult Google, which tells me about restaurants, museums, and so forth, replete with descriptions, ratings, photos and other static media. It’s the algorithm that makes it possible. Technology delivers this information. It is arms-length information. I don’t know who created this information and I have little in the way of intimacy with those content creators to aid determining their intentions. The information has very possibly been spun by media professionals: publicists, crisis management professionals, marketing copywriters and strategists.

Right now there are around 30 million twitter users. Twitter adoption is growing logarithmically. Just six months ago, there were 6 million twitter users. In six months there could be over 200 million (like facebook, which could qualify it among the top six largest industrial countries in the world). Revisiting my hypothetical, I arrive in Los Angeles and I go to
twitter search and now I get suggestions about where to dine and what to see from actual people. I could even tweet a request for suggestions and get an avalanche of answers. I can evaluate those responses the way I would evaluate suggestions from any actual person. I can read their tweets. I can get a sense, quickly, for the their authenticity. Happyfeet could warn me about what joints have the highest prevalence of dirty socialists.

That’s just the most facile and yet useful example. Twitter has directed me to untold number of exceptionally interesting articles, blog posts and people. I’ve met profoundly interesting people like
Todd Gailun and I’ve had the chance to talk back to Karl Rove (who authors his own tweets). I’ve been afforded this access by merit of my participation and the knowledge granted has an immediacy that is breathtaking. The plane crash in Denver last December was tweeted by someone on the plane from their phone as it happened. Find someone closer to the story than that! Find a way to obtain such knowledge more quickly!

But back to the paradigm shift and why classical liberals and libertarians must embrace it in my view. We are, I contend, seeing a near perfect recapitulation of the events that transpired in the middle of the 18th century in America and France. Rigid hierarchies are once again being rejected in favor of something more liberal. The backlash represented by everything from post-modernism to adbusters and Naomi Klein to anti-corporatism to just anyone whose worked for a corporation and recognized how soul-crushingly shitty it is to do so, is the same esprit that fueled the American and French revolutions. It is merely playing out in a different venue. To borrow from Jeff, this backlash doesn’t represent a legitimate prescriptive; it is merely a backlash. The solutions offered up by those who have most readily embraced these new social media tools amount to, as Wired puts it,
The New Socialism, which is to say, the same old shit. As I mentioned above, socialism is just the other side of the Enlightenment paradigm coin from capitalism.

As these new social tools infiltrate the enterprise, they will subvert the hierarchies that have characterized the management of an enterprise since Adam Smith. I can explain exactly how it will happen because I’ve seen it. I sell enterprise 2.0 / innovation tools and to large organizations. What will rise in replacement of these hierarchies is what remains to be seen. To those socialist economists who say that the market should be managed just like the inside of the enterprise, I say, you have it precisely backward. The market should not be made to look more like the enterprise, the enterprise should be made to look more like the market.

There's more at the link.

By the way, I'm kind of stoked that
Allahpundit just now tweeted one of my posts, and it's only my second day on Twitter!