TechFold - Bold tech & web commentary
Bold tech & web commentary
TechFold is technology discussion, commentary, reviews, and opinions from well outside the valley. There's no koolaid to drink here, and TechFold is not in SL, or on Twitter.
Scoble and Twitter in the Borneo Bulletin: the future of news?
Wow - a funny occurence, in light of my growing interest in Twitter of late. I was flipping through the Borneo Bulletin at a cafe in Brunei, and amidst the coverage of the catastrophic earthquake in China, stumbled across coverage of none other than the tech blogosphere’s two darlings: Robert “Andrew” Scoble and Twitter. It looks like a wire excerpt, but still fascinating to see in a tabloid format local Borneo paper…
“Twitters Beat Media in Reporting China Quake (Sanfrancisco, AFP): The world had real-time new about China’s massive earthquake as victim’s dashed out Twitter text messages while it took place, in what was being touted Tuesday as microblogging outshining mainstream news. As the earth shook with tragic consequences, people in parts of China that felt the quake used their mobiles to send terse messages provided by the San Fransisco-based Twitter Inc. News of the deadly catastrophe reached Twitter devotees such as blogger Andrew Scoble in San Francisco even before the massive tremblor, which killed more than 12,000 people in Szechuan province, was reported by news organizations and the earthquake-tracking US Geological Survey. “Several people in China reported to me they felt the quake while it was going on!” Scoble wrote in his popular Scobleizer blog. Twitters are abbreviated text messages that can be instantly posted on online bulletin boards and personal websites and sent to the mobile phones of selected friends.
For me, this post, found in this paper in this place highlights the parallelism rapidly emerging between the blogosphere and mainstream media: for breaking news and on the ground reporting, blogs and micro-blogging services are rapidly becoming the global-standard destination. Connecting web users and mobile users, first world and third, journalism with ad-hoc/off-the-cuff/street-cred reporting, the net is the first place more and more are turning - in the developing world, its setting a precedent that will shape the evolution of nascent news/communications/entertainment industries. The mainstream media is assuming a new shape as well: in depth coverage, background research, and historical context are services that are more easily provided by a news organization…
Anyway, in a nutshell: blogs/microblogging provides instant, unfiltered news; MSM provides a longer term perspective on a given story. Both have a place, neither is mutually exclusive. Its late, I’m tired, I hope this point is coming across - more on this later.
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Track your Memes on Twitter!
Here’s some fun news: this afternoon I decided to figure out how to use the Twitter API, which is decidedly simple and functional. Anyway, if you’re a twitterholic, you can now get your dose of technology, automotive, environmental, or sun microsystems news via twitter - each of my memetrackers now merrily posts all of its front-page updates to a twitter account for your enjoyment!
TechWatching (tech and web): http://twitter.com/techwatching
SunMeme (sun micro): http://twitter.com/sunmeme
WheelScore (automotive): http://twitter.com/wheelscore
PlasticBasket (environmental): http://twitter.com/plasticbasket.net
On a sidenote, I’m appreciating the utility of Twitter more and more every day as a broadcast medium and selective news filter.
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One more thing: PlasticBasket.net
Are you concerned about environmental issues? If so, get your hourly dose of breaking green news/issues/views at PlasticBasket.net.
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Follow Stories with Cluster Permalinks
I just rolled out a minor but important new feature across the memetracker network that I’m building (TechWatching, Wheelscore, SunMeme, PlasticBasket) - story cluster permalinks.
For background, a “story cluster” is a group of stories around a certain topic - a “meme” or summary of a blogosphere discussion. A story cluster permalink gives you a permanent URL for viewing story clusters - so if you’re following Cadillac’s hybrid motorbike or Fred Wilson’s views on Triangulation, you can follow that story today, tomorrow, a month from now, a year from now - whenever, not just when its still on the front page.
To get to a cluster’s permalink, just look for the “PERMALINK THIS CLUSTER” link at the top of each cluster.
So - enjoy!
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Experiments in Corporate Intelligence: SunMeme
Sun Microsystems is if not unique then at least rare in the robustness of its internal blogging community, and the willingness of the corporate legal department to make that community public. Indeed, Sun has almost 5000 publicly readable blogs - from the CEO to the developers in the trenches, from all around the world.
I think its great - I’ve been a long term advocate of internal blogging and the knowledge sharing and growth spurs. There’s more though: a corporate blog community as robust as Sun’s presents a great opportunity for aggregation and memetic analysis: so, I copied and pasted TechWatching onto SunMeme.com and pointed the system to Sun’s blogosphere and let it off its leash.
So far its tracking 683 Sun blogs, of which its actively processing stories from the 182 most active. From what I can tell, it starting to produce some good output - story clusters building around the new UltraSparc processor, for instance, or a NetBeans talk that took place in SecondLife.
There are challenges in tackling the Sun blogosphere too, however; keyword analysis is difficult as some keywords (”java”) are omnipresent, and can’t be used to link together stories. I’m convinced that there’s workarounds though, and the deeper SunMeme gets into the Sun blogosphere, the better the output is looking.
Anyway, enjoy. And if you work at Sun, please feel free to share your thoughts!
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