Yahoo research on Twitter: Who’s Talking, Who’s Listening?

Yahoo! Research just published a lengthy study about Who Says What to Whom on Twitter. They used Twitter Lists to find what they called elite users, and based their conclusions on that data set.

The results of the research are available in a hard-to-read PDF file with some interesting charts and graphs. Here’s the summary information. I’ve added some paragraph breaks to make it easier to read.

First, we find that although audience attention has indeed fragmented among a wider pool of content producers than classical models of mass media, attention remains highly concentrated, where roughly 0.05% of the population accounts for almost half of all attention. Within the population of elite users, moreover, attention is highly homophilous, with celebrities following celebrities, media following media, and bloggers following bloggers.

Second, we find considerable support for the two-step flow of information — almost half the information that originates from the media passes to the masses indirectly via a diff use intermediate layer of opinion leaders, who although classi fied as ordinary users, are more connected and more exposed to the media than their followers.

Third, we find that although all categories devote a roughly similar fraction of their attention to di fferent categories of news (World, U.S., Business, etc), there are some differences — organizations, for example, devote a surprisingly small fraction of their attention to business-related news.

We also find that diff erent types of content exhibit very di fferent lifespans. In particular, media-originated URLs are disproportionately represented among short-lived URLs while those originated by bloggers tend to be overrepresented among long-lived URLs.

Finally, we nd that the longest-lived URLs are dominated by content such as videos and music, which are continually being rediscovered by Twitter users and appear to persist indefinitely.

I thought the statement that long-lived URLs were those originated by bloggers was significant. Bloggers are indeed becoming an important force in the media landscape. Who are the top 5 bloggers they studied? Mashable, ProBlogger, Kibe Loco and Nao Salvo (both Brazilian blogs) and dooce.

Another of the statements — that attention is highly ‘homophilous’ (a word my dictionary does not contain, but I presume they intend to mean an interest in people who are similar to us) — just makes common sense. Of course Twitter users follow people who share their interests. With all the noise on Twitter, you have to narrow it down somehow. Is it surprising that I’d be more interested in what Zeldman is talking about than in what Justin Bieber is talking about?

Useful Links: Flexbox, Floats, Media Queries

Flexible Box Layout Model is now a working draft at the W3C. The new layout model is going to change the way we think about layout.

Give Floats the Flick in CSS Layouts at Sitepoint is another kick in the pants and the way we’ve thought about layout in the past few years.

Hardboiled CSS 3 Media Queries at Stuff and Nonsense is a downloadable CSS file that make it easy for you to start using media queries right now.

Useful links: Net Neutrality, PR pitches, data mapping

NTC Plenary: Moira Gunn and Rep Donna Edwards on Net Neutrality is an interesting account of an important conversation.

I feel kind of bad now from The Bloggess (language warning whenever The Bloggess is involved) is funny but a perfect reflection of the kind of crazy PR email bloggers receive all the time. Jenny’s tactics are much funnier than my tactic.

This video is worth watching. Starting about half-way through, it gets into mapping public conversation and broadcast media in ways that I think you’ll find fascinating. There are many potential implementations of data mapping like this.

Useful links: Interactions, Mary Sue, Steampunk, Biz Stone

Visualizing First-Time Interactions at SXSW from Pleasure and Pain is another of those charts of hubs, connections, and connectors that is so fascinating. This time it uses contacts made via Hashable.

The Mary Sue is a new blog devoted to female geek culture. I’ve been watching them a couple of weeks and have seen several very worthy posts there, such as this one: The Unseen Effects of Affirmative Action at MIT.

Does the word steampunk make you happy? Well, GeekMom is celebrating a whole week of Steampunk posts, beginning with this one.

Twitter just turned 5. (See my post about Twitter turning 5 on BlogHer.) The NPR program Fresh Air interviewed Biz Stone about Twitter in preparation for the anniversary. It’s a great interview and must listening. Twitter’s Biz Stone on Starting a Revolution.

Get your accessibility on: John Slatin AccessU open for registration

Get on the cutting edge of compliant, universal design and learn accessibility from top experts!

Attendees at AccessU will engage with world renowned accessibility experts to improve design skills and to understand the both the need and the techniques for inclusive IT design. From the basics to the bleeding edge, AccessU will provide the resources you need.

Early bird registration for this Knowbility event is now open.

John Slatin AccessU
May 17, 2011 – May 19, 2011
St. Edward’s University
Austin, TX

Blogger gets a makeover

[Ed.: This article was cross-posted at BlogHer.]

At SXSW Interactive this week, Google announced a refresh of the interface for its popular Blogger blogging platform. The software hasn’t been updated in years, although it remains one of the most popular blogging tools on the Web.

Blogger Product Manager Chang Kim calls the refresh “our next-generation user interface.” The changes will roll out over 2011 in stages, so don’t expect to open up your Blogger blog and find it completely different in one big step. The user interface is the big news, but there are several improvements, among them new mobile themes and something Blogger is calling a ‘content discovery engine’ that “that lets you uncover interesting and related content based on the topics of the blog you’re currently reading.”

On the geekier side, the new changes will incorporate the Google Web Toolkit. This may not matter much to you if you’re using a blogspot URL, but if you hosting a Blogger blog on your own server, this will mean you have more control over the features you can manipulate.

For everyday use, the interface will change to a sleeker and more up-to-date look. Here you see a new blog post screen showing the familiar older interface at the top, with the new look in front near the bottom.

blogger Interface

The Dashboard will change as well. Here’s the new Dashboard.

Blogger's new dashboard

At Free Technology for Teachers, the comment was made,

The new editor looks a lot like the Google Docs document editor.

Anna Leach at Shiny Shiny said,

They are smartening up the back-end of the site – making it easier to see what you’re doing, and giving users a more intuitive preview of their work.

Google released a promotional video about Blogger.

Sarah Gooding at WPMU very helpfully listed the new features mentioned in the video.

  • The ability to easily customize templates without any CSS knowledge
  • Access to real-time stats
  • Improved spam filtering
  • Continued stability (The Blogger service has had zero downtime, according to Pingdom)
  • Inclusion of web fonts
  • A sleek mobile experience of the platform
  • Smart content discovery
  • Integration of the Google Web Toolkit

In an era when sites we’ve come to depend on (like Flickr) are being neglected or abandoned by their owners, it’s great that Google is stepping up to keep Blogger competitive and on the cutting edge.

With luckychic, you’re thrilled or you’re screwed

I got a PR email from a site called Lucky Chic. The email talked about getting iPads and other tech toys for almost nothing. They guarantee that their products are the real thing. When I look at the site, I saw bidding on items that looked like this.

an iPad bid on Lucky Chic

I decided to register to check them out. Here’s what I learned.

  1. The price isn’t really $3.90, it’s $3.90 X 6 or $23.40, which is, of course, still insanely cheap for an iPad. But who knows how high the bidding would go in the next 2+ hours.
  2. You buy bid tokens for $.60 each. Each bid you place raises the price of an item $.10.
  3. You must buy bid tokens in advance in multiples of 10, 20, 30, etc. You cannot purchase more bid tokens in the midst of bidding on something. You cannot turn in unused bid tokens for a refund.
  4. If you don’t win the bidding war, the money is gone – spent. Once you fork over say, $18 for 30 bid tokens, the money is gone whether you end up with something or not. You pay to bid even if you don’t get the item.

I suppose if you are the person who wins the bidding and gets a fabulous tech toy for almost nothing you would be thrilled. The rest of the players are just screwed.

Really, lucky chic? That seems like a way to build loyalty and enthusiasm to you?

No thanks.