› 2008/11/15
via www.macworld.com/
Here’s the simple truth: Enterprise hates surprises. It’s not what they want. Enterprise wants predictability. They want to know when, what, how much, and that it will be all new and cool, yet change nothing. (Yes that’s contradictory. Have you ever tried to use “Enterprise Software?” Winning usability awards is so not happening there.) And they want to know everything in detail a year ahead of time. Can anyone seriously imagine how long Apple would survive under that model? Right, not long.
enterprises mögen keine neuen ideen. daher wird sich twitter hier nur langsam durchsetzen.
› 2008/11/09
via broadcast.oreilly.com/
How Techies Can Improve Democracy and Governance
Obama Wahl, Politik, und die Relevanz von Web 2.0 zeugs.
› 2008/11/05
via arstechnica.com/
Current, cofounded by Al Gore, saw success with a "Hack the Debates" experiment in which the company overlaid political posts from Twitter users on top of live coverage of the McCain and Obama debates in real time. For its November 4 election night coverage, Current will fuse traditional and social media even further by incorporating real-time content from Digg, Twitter, and even video commentary from 12seconds.tv users.
Current, ein TV-Sender, hat zur U.S. Wahl TV mit Twitter und Digg vermengt.
› 2008/10/18
via www.alleyinsider.com/
Twitter will eventually be worth more than $1 billion, possibly a lot more.
› 2008/10/18
via www.theatlantic.com/
A columnist can ignore or duck a subject less noticeably than a blogger committing thoughts to pixels several times a day. A reporter can wait—must wait—until every source has confirmed. A novelist can spend months or years before committing words to the world. For bloggers, the deadline is always now. Blogging is therefore to writing what extreme sports are to athletics: more free-form, more accident-prone, less formal, more alive. It is, in many ways, writing out loud.
super zitat, dass die zeitliche differenz, und damit den wesentlichen unterschied, von journalismus / blogging / (microblogging) verdeutlicht
› 2008/10/18
via www.alleyinsider.com/
Why is Twitter different than the 9,000 other Web 2.0 companies that are intending to figure out a revenue model eventually? Because people are obsessed with it.
› 2008/10/18
via www.theatlantic.com/
the key to understanding a blog is to realize that it’s a broadcast, not a publication. If it stops moving, it dies. If it stops paddling, it sinks.
matt drudge on blogs (via andrew sullivan)
› 2008/10/18
via www.theatlantic.com/
As you read a log, you have the curious sense of moving backward in time as you move forward in pages
andrew sullivan on blogging.
› 2008/10/18
via www.theatlantic.com/
From the first few days of using the form, I was hooked. The simple experience of being able to directly broadcast my own words to readers was an exhilarating literary liberation.
sullivan, erklärt den reiz des einfachen publizierens
› 2008/10/18
via www.theatlantic.com/
It is the spontaneous expression of instant thought—impermanent beyond even the ephemera of daily journalism. It is accountable in immediate and unavoidable ways to readers and other bloggers, and linked via hypertext to continuously multiplying references and sources. Unlike any single piece of print journalism, its borders are extremely porous and its truth inherently transitory.
andrew sullivan on blogging.
› 2008/10/18
via www.theatlantic.com/
We bloggers have scant opportunity to collect our thoughts, to wait until events have settled and a clear pattern emerges. We blog now—as news reaches us, as facts emerge.
temporaler unterschied zwischen blog und print journalismus
› 2008/10/18
via www.theatlantic.com/
But reporters and columnists tended to operate in a relative sanctuary, answerable mainly to their editors, not readers. For a long time, columns were essentially monologues published to applause, muffled murmurs, silence, or a distant heckle. I’d gotten blowback from pieces before—but in an amorphous, time-delayed, distant way. Now the feedback was instant, personal, and brutal.
blogging schafft eine direktere verbindung zwischen writer und publics
› 2008/10/08
via arstechnica.com/
The authors feel strongly that the fact that real-world bullying strongly predicts cyberbullying and the parallels in behavior both suggest that cyberbullying may not actually be a distinct phenomenon. "These findings further underscore the continuity between adolescents' social worlds in school and online," they conclude.
Viele charakteristika von personeller kommunikation sind auch im internet zugegen.
› 2008/10/08
via tech.slashdot.org/
The Guardian has an interesting story on Vint Cerf, the 'father of the internet,' in which he says there's no silver bullet for scammers, spammers and criminals running zombie networks and porn-to-porn file swapping because 'the internet was designed that way.' Cerf adds, 'Like every medium, the internet can be abused. When we think about it, we can commit fraud locally and internationally using the telephone system and postal service.
spam, das Internet war so designed, dass spam möglich ist. es lässt sich nicht einfach so beheben.
› 2008/10/06
via news.slashdot.org/
On Friday someone posted a false rumor that Steve Jobs had suffered a heart attack on CNN's unverified citizen journalism site, iReport. Apple's stock price went vertical, losing 9% before Apple stepped in and denied the rumor; the stock then recovered most of its loss. The SEC is investigating. PCWorld looks at the hit taken by citizen journalism as a result of this incident.
die macht, die durch citizen journalism entsteht.
› 2008/10/06
via news.slashdot.org/
This is The Register's world-class investigative piece concerning one aspect of the meltdown on Wall Street ('naked short selling') and how the criminals engaged a journalist to distort Wikipedia to confuse the discourse. The article explicitly and formally accuses a well-known US financial journalist, Gary Weiss, of lying about his efforts to distort a Wikipedia page under assumed names, and accuses the Powers That Be in Wikipedia (right up to and including Jimbo Wales) of complicity in protecting Weiss. This is not another story about a 15-year-old farm kid in Iowa pretending to be a professor. This is like the worst Chomskian view of Elites manipulating mass opinion. But it is all documented
wikipedia, etc, being used for mass opinion manipulation. wikipedia hat viel mehr vertrauen, als z.B. das fernsehen, da es von "gleichgesinnten" geschrieben wurde
› 2008/10/01
via www.spreeblick.com/
Das Fernsehen könnte das theoretisch leisten, hat sich aber entschieden, für politische Themen höchstens eine Stunde am Stück freizuschaufeln. Diese Sendungen werden dann mit acht Gästen bestückt, jeder hat ein paar Minuten, um ein, höchstens zwei Thesen abzusondern, dann wird es ein wenig laut und dann ist auch gut. In Zeitungen wird nur eine Sicht vermittelt, dann werden ein paar Leserbriefe veröffentlicht, bestenfalls wird noch eine Gegenrede herausgegeben. Ein Buch vermittelt auf zweihundert Seiten nur eine Perspektive, dafür aber umso breiter. Blieben noch Fachzeitschriften.
Metadiskussion! gibt es dafür Metapopcorn?
digitale medien gegen traditionelle medien bezüglich politik
› 2008/09/30
via arstechnica.com/
Most Americans feel that companies should have a presence on social media sites, and many feel that they should actively interact with customers through those sites. Those are just some of the findings of the 2008 Cone Business in Social Media Study, which said that 93 percent of Americans expect to see companies online where the users are—on social networking and other media sites.
IMPORTANT! 93% der amerikaner meinen, dass es wichtig ist, dass unternehmen auch im social web präsent sind
› 2008/09/06
via arstechnica.com/
But people also use Twitter for much more interesting things, and we'd like to be your tour guide through the less-explored portions of the Twittersphere (yep, another "sphere" for you to be aware of). Welcome to Twitter's more interesting, more useful, and more innovative side.
Zusammenfassung der unterschiedlichen Nutzungsweisen die es inzwischen für Twitter gibt.
› 2008/09/02
via arstechnica.com/
In the void between blogging and instant messaging, microblogging has emerged to provide users with yet another medium for electronic communication. Microblogging services, such as Twitter and Identi.ca, allow users to post short messages (140 characters or less) for their friends and followers. The technology offers a sort of universal back-channel for real-world events and helps bring Internet acquaintances closer together.
short description of twitter
› 2008/09/02
via arstechnica.com/
Like all new mediums, microblogging is ripe for artistic exploitation. New York Times writer Matt Richtel set out to test Twitter's literary potential by writing a "Twiller", a thriller story in 140-character increments. Richtel valiantly attempts to convey a cliché murder mystery—complete with dead hookers, an amnesia-afflicted killer, and (of course) Barack Obama.
Twitter being used for writig short stories
› 2008/08/21
via twitter.com/
Twitter-Bashing von Bloggern ist das neue Blogger-Bashing von Journalisten.
Interessante Beobachtung zu Twitter.
› 2008/08/21
via ivy.antville.org/
Nach dem Riesenerfolg der Twitterlesung, wo Blogger beschlossen hatten es toll zu finden sich gegenseitig Kurzmitteilungen mit der intellektuellen Fallhöhe von Einkaufszetteln vorzulesen, nun der nächste Hammer-Kulturevent: Landwirte aus Sachsen-Anhalt lesen ihre Lieblings-Wasserstandsmeldungen für die Flusschifffahrt aus drei Jahrhunderten.
Blogger Sven K. kritisiert den geringen Wert der Inhalte twitters. M. e. ungerechtfertigt, da er falsche Maßstäbe ansetzt. Twitter will nicht erstrangig Qualitätsjournalismus abdecken. Twitter deckt alle Kommunikation ab und dadurch nebenher auch Relevantes und Hinweise die dann als Grundlage für qualitativ hochwertige journalistische Produkte dienen können. Twitter ist eher ein digitales Pendant zu einer Freundesrunde / Stammtisch o.a. etwas, wo jeder einem begrenzten Publikum (d.h. im kleinen Rahmen) seine Gedanken mitteilen kann. Aber mit einer Archivierungsfunktion.
› 2008/08/19
via arstechnica.com/
Folks are increasingly getting their news online as the popularity of traditional news outlets like TV, radio, and newspapers continues to decline. The Pew Research Center for the People & the Press conducted its biennial survey of news consumption between April 30 and June 1 this year of 3,612 US adults. Pew named four distinct groupings of the news audience, and although all groups still rely on traditional media in some ways, online sources continue to gain traction—and from desirable demographics. That said, Americans still have some issues with the Internet as a news source, however.
Online News Consumption Gros - Despite Credibility Issues
› 2008/08/19
via arstechnica.com/
Rep. John Culberson (R-TX), a pioneer in using new media to communicate with constituents, sounded the alarm over the new rules via Twitter.
US Congressman uses Twitter
› 2008/08/19
via twitter.com/
Langsam hab ich den Eindruck, dass Tweets PR-Agenturen mehr in Panik versetzen als Blog-Einträge...
Thomas Knuewer über die Relevanz von Twitter für PR
› 2008/08/19
via arstechnica.com/
Twitter seems like a really stupid concept... and it is! There's no reason anyone would want to spend their time reading and writing random, stream of consciousness microblogs. Really. I can't stop.
I don't know what it is, but it's stupidly addictive.
Kurt Mackey on the Twitter addiction
› 2008/08/18
via dfbills.com/
I heard this stat last night: “6 of the top 10 sites are social apps” so I decided to check out out. According to Alexa, this is correct:
Sehr interessant, um die Wichtigkeit sozialer Komponenten zu untermauern.
› 2008/08/18
via arstechnica.com/
Social websites like Facebook and MySpace have attracted a great deal of attention as targets of opportunity for phishing scams, but they are scarcely the only two social networking sites. New information suggests that hackers have tuned in to the newfound popularity of microblogging, and are at the very least evaluating Twitter as a potential target.
Spammers target Twitter too.
› 2008/08/18
via yro.slashdot.org/
"You have already heard the news that the SCO Group's US$5 billion threat against Linux is effectively finished. It was the Web site Groklaw.net that broke the news and posted the complete 102-page ruling; after that, it was picked up by mainstream media and trade press. In fact, it's Groklaw that has covered every aspect of SCO's legal fights with Linux vendors IBM , Novell and Red Hat and Linux users Daimler Chrysler and AutoZone ever since paralegal Pamela Jones started the site as a hobby in 2003. This feature does a great job of chronicling Groklaws' hand in the demise of SCO's case."
tolles beispiel, für die möglichkeiten die partizipation und verbreitungstechnologien erlauben.
› 2008/08/16
via freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/
But why should we be the sole beneficiaries of such blegs? Surely our readers, in addition to providing a great reservoir of diverse knowledge, also have bleg requests of their own.
Freakonomics blog nutzen, um meine digg arbeit und quotevault zu vermarkten
› 2008/08/15
via blog.twitter.com/
The good news for most people is that we're taking measures to reduce junk in the system—and it's working.
Twitter implementiert Methoden um Spam zu reduzieren, Junk auszufiltern.
› 2008/08/15
via blog.twitter.com/
Follow spam is the act of following mass numbers of people, not because you're actually interested in their tweets, but simply to gain attention, get views of your profile (and possibly clicks on URLs therein), or (ideally) to get followed back.
Wie funktioniert 'Follow Spam' bei Twitter.