Digg Million User Celebration

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This last week I was doing some old school Web research for a few clients. It’s work that I normally don’t get to do but is important to know how to do and is good to do every now and then. Things like back link checking and finding influencers across various industries via social networks. Here are some random facts I learned this week that you may not normally think about.

Robert & Mike generate the most buzz

Robert Scoble and Mike Arrington generate more new blog posts than pretty much anyone else in the tech bloggosphere. OK, that may have been obvious but here’s how much of a difference there is. This isn’t a perfect science but it’ll give you the idea. This is for one client on the same story:

  • Robert – 1 post = 25 new posts
  • Mike  3 posts = 67 new posts
  • All of Mashable 4 posts = 15 new posts
  • All of ReadWriteWeb 7 posts = 25 new posts

Ars Technica is geekier than TechCrunch

OK, again not earth shattering news but here’s how that manifests:

Bloggers are better self promoters

Yeah again earth shattering news, I know.  Bloggers will almost always post a picture on their LinkedIn profile (you may be surprised how many people don’t). The notable exception to this is bloggers who work in IT Security. You’d be hard pressed to find anyone in that industry that posts pictures of themselves anywhere (paranoid much?).

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Microblogging is about to go Supernova

SN 1996cr in Circinus: Powerful Nearby Superno...
Image by Smithsonian Institution via Flickr

Two new developments this week are the precursors to potentially huge developments. Laconi.ca and Jaiku are two other microblogging platforms. The big difference is that they are both open source. Laconi.ca has always been open source. Jaiku was an early competitor to Twitter which got bought by Google and then promptly shut down. They have now opened up Jaiku as an open source project.

You can read mre about developments with Laconi.ca here and more about Jaiku here.

So why is Tac geeking out over this. Well, if you remember not so many days ago I made the claim that

5 years from now the non-early adopters will be using dozens of services built on top of Twitter and they won’t even realize it

Laconi.ca and Jaiku give developers an even greater abilty to further microbloggings functionality into additional apps.

One of the keys to this (I think) will be developers tapping into Twitter’s API so that #hashtags, @replies and other common protocal translate well across services.

Everything from Web chat, sentiment engines, polling applications etc, etc, could be build on Twitter (and other microblogging tools) without ever having to interact with Twitter itself.

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