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Tag Archives: FriendFeed

Me? … I’m a cranky social media un-expert

Posted on April 1, 2009 by Steven Hodson
1 Comment

ifyoutalkedtopeople Late last night I jokingly posted a note on FriendFeed with something similar to the headline of this post. I say jokingly because I have in the majority of case come to the conclusion that anyone calling themselves a social media guru, or expert, is full of shit.

There are exceptions, as there are to any rule, but those that are the real experts – the real gurus – are an exceptionally rare breed. They are people like Chris Brogan, Brian Solis and Stowe Boyd. The rest of them are just tacking on the newest marketing buzzword to their signatures without even understanding what Social Media is.

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Categories: Technology | Tags: experts, Facebook, FriendFeed, social media, Twitter

Let’s all dump on social media and Twitter

Posted on March 27, 2009 by Steven Hodson
17 Comments

Truck-Dumping It must be the weekend because much like my post earlier today everyone seems to be lining up to take some shots at social media and even bigger shots at Twitter. It’s not that these things might not deserve it especially when we find out we have ghosts in the machine but really it does get a little old after awhile.

I’ve had three posts from earlier today lined up all ready to shotgun together a nice little rant and then Mark “Rizzn” Hopkins had to go and ruin the flow – more on that in a bit. For now though I just want to take a look at two specific posts from this morning because in of themselves they were some pretty good smack down. First up is a post from Douglas Karr over at The Marketing Technology Blog and while I’m not use to Douglas going on a rant like this, it definitely went well with the morning coffee.

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Categories: Technology | Tags: Chris Brogan, Facebook, FriendFeed, internet, social media, Twitter

How to show you’re a loser on Twitter and in social media

Posted on March 27, 2009 by Steven Hodson
16 Comments

ghost-twitter Everyone is in an uproar today (gee does anyone smell a bitchmeme in the works?) over a post by Noam Cohen at the New York Times about how <gasp> all those famous people on Twitter might just be ghosts of themselves. Gee do you think – what a conclusion to come to.

I’ve been saying since the beginning of this whole follower or friend malarkey that anyone who thinks that people like Barak Obama or any one of those fancy ass stars are actually writing those messages need to check their grasp on reality.

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Categories: Technology | Tags: Facebook, FriendFeed, ghostwriters, social media, Twitter

Does an Authority Index even mean anything anymore?

Posted on March 10, 2009 by Steven Hodson
10 Comments

From the early days of blogging there has always been talk about the upper level of writers who were often referred to as the A-List of blogging. This was all derived from the Technorati leader board that listed the top 100 blogs in the world. Over the past couple of years though this list has grown to mean less and less.

Part of the reason was that increasingly we were seeing mainstream media showing up on the list as they began to embrace the social media world and blogging. As with Techmeme the individual blogs began to fade from these Authority Indexes being replaced with the likes of The New York Times blogs and even faux corporate blogs that didn’t do much more that post press releases.

However their effect on the concept of the Authority Index is nothing compared, in my opinion, to the effect that services like Twitter, FriendFeed and Facebook ultimately have had on it. You see the idea behind the Authority Index is  that it was the measure of the number of links to any blog from other blogs within a 60 day period. With the burgeoning popularity of things like Twitter we find that links are being spread further afield from blogs.

As this trend increases – which it will – the value of links in blog posts as a way to measure another blog’s value decreases. Rather than people posting interesting links on their blogs they are posting them instead to Twitter or FriendFeed. As Brian Solis points out

As the social Web and new services continue the migration and permeation into everything we do online, attention is not scalable. Many refer to this dilemma as attention scarcity or continuous partial attention (CPA) – an increasingly thinning state of focus. It’s affecting how and what we consume, when, and more importantly, how we react, participate and share. That something is forever vying for our attention and relentlessly pushing us to do more with less driven by the omnipresent fear of potentially missing what’s next.

We are learning to publish and react to content in “Twitter time” and I’d argue that many of us are spending less time blogging, commenting directly on blogs, or writing blogs in response to blog sources because of our active participation in micro communities.

All this change therefore begs the question – is the idea of an Authority Index now something of the past or can it be modernized to take into account these micro communities?

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Categories: Technology | Tags: authority ranking, Facebook, FriendFeed, Techmeme, Technorati, Twitter
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