SAS News & Research sur Twitter : "Tickets for @Lucy_Worsley's #AACH15 lecture can be purchased separately here: #twitterstorians. Default. Tips For Analysing the Competition on Twitter. As well as being a great tool for promoting your business and measuring the success of campaigns via retweets and follows, Twitter also provides useful insight into your competitor’s activities.
But the analytics don’t stop there. Nearly all of Twitter data is publicly available, and there are a number of websites and apps that you can freely access to get the absolute low-down on your competitor’s followers and strategies, so you can try and suss out what’s really going on. Ads UK sur Twitter : "Next @adidasNEOLabel - a fashion show created by Twitter users, for Twitter users #TwitterWorks... Franceinfo : #Erdogan l'avait promis, l'accès... Erdogan l'avait promis, la Turquie bloque l'accès à Twitter. Les motifs avancés sont d'ordre judiciaire.
Mais nul doute que la décision du Premier ministre turc d'interdire Twitter dans son pays, a aussi des considérations hautement politiques. A dix jours d'élections locales capitales pour son parti, l'AKP, Recep Tayyip Erdogan a mis à exécution une menace formulée quelques heures plus tôt ce jeudi.
Mashup. Tw. Twitter - Libraries and Web 2.0. ‘Controlled Serendipity’ Liberates the Web - Bits Blog. Twitter.com/nickbiltonAtul Arora’s Twitter stream shows a constant flow of breaking technology news links.
When I finish writing this blog post, I will Tweet it. I will copy this link, go to my Twitter account and spend a minute writing an abbreviated (yet hopefully catchy) description of this piece. And I’ll follow the same actions on Facebook and other social networks. Then off I go to scour the Web looking for more news to sift through and ration out to my friends and followers — a natural course of action in my day. I spend a considerable amount of time each day looking for interesting angles about technology, news, journalism, design or just the latest comic video to pass along the daisy chain.
Most of us do this to some degree. More important, I couldn’t conceive of a world of news and information without the aid of others helping me find the relevant links. Mrs. Sharing has become a reflex action when people find an interesting video, link or story. We are all human aggregators now. How Twitter replaced my RSS reader. As an avid Twitter user, I'm constantly trying to find ways to extend its functionality and make it more than a place to converse with friends and discuss what's going on in my life.
Doing that can be quite simple. More often than not, I'll employ "Remember the Milk" or a similar tool that lets me use Twitter to manage my tasks. These tools typically work well and help me achieve my single desire: to fully exploit Twitter and get everything I can out of it. But in recent weeks, I've realized that I've been missing the boat in a very big way.
In the past I've used sites like Bloglines, Google Reader, and others to track prominent sites, and find out what kind of stories they're covering each day. Reluctant Technologist. If the ongoing social networking revolution has you scratching your head and asking, "Why do people spend time on this?
" and "How can my company benefit from the social network revolution? " you've got a lot in common with Harvard Business School professor Mikolaj Jan Piskorski. Only difference: Piskorski has spent years studying users of online social networks (SN) and has developed surprising findings about the needs that they fulfill, how men and women use these services differently, and how Twitter—the newest kid on the block—is sharply different from forerunners such as Facebook and MySpace.
He has also applied many of the insights to help companies develop strategies for leveraging these various online entities for profit. Addressing network failures. LITACamp09: Lightning Talk on Twitter. Twitter for Libraries (and Librarians) FEATURE Twitter for Libraries (and Librarians) by Sarah Milstein For many people, the word “twitter” brings to mind birds rather than humans. But information professionals know that Twitter (www.twitter.com) is a fast-growing, free messaging service for people, and it’s one that libraries (and librarians) can make good use of—without spending much time or effort.
Twitter lets people send and receive short messages (called Tweets) via the web or via SMS using a mobile phone. Messages on Twitter are limited to a maximum of 140 characters, including spaces, and they’re generally public. Because each message is just a sentence or two, a carefully crafted post can convey a good deal of information without taking a lot of time to read or write. To automatically see what someone else is saying, you “follow” them. Thanks to the brevity of messages on Twitter, people often refer to the medium as “microblogging.”
For example, a library could share all kinds of news that patrons want. Carte Subjective de la Twittosphere Francophone. Souvent, lorsque je suis sur le marché ou me promène le week-end sur les berges de la Siagne, les gens m’arrêtent et me demandent “Henry Michel, vous followez plus de 2000 personnes sur Twitter.
Mais si je vous demandais de ne m’en citer qu’une grosse centaine, qui choisiriez-vous ? Qui me conseillez-vous de follower ?” Dans ces cas là je sors mon stylo et grifffone sur un bout de papier la centaine de noms qui me vient en mémoire, mais l’exercice peut parfois être lassant. J’ai donc décidé de créer cette petite carte me permettant de retrouver en un coup d’oeil les twitteurs que j’aime suivre. Avant que vous ne l’ouvriez, quelques avertissements, pour rester dans la légèreté : - C’est une carte subjective, donc absolument pas exhaustive. . - Ne cherchez pas des significations alambiquées pour les twitteurs côte à côte, il n’y en a souvent pas. . - Faites votre carte vous aussi.
Une version 1.5 très révisée a été uploadée. Pour voir la carte : v 1.5 – Version JPG 2134 x 1600 , 300 dpi, 732 Ko. Why Twitter Matters. Can the fledgling microblogging service become a social media powerhouse to rival giants like Facebook—or will it be gobbled up?
It's easy to laugh at nonsense on Twitter, the microblogging rage. "My nose is leaking," writes someone called Zapples, "so imma go to sleep now. …" But I've heard lots of similar drivel (and even produced some myself) on the phone—an important technology if there ever was one. The key question today isn't what's dumb on Twitter, but instead how a service with bite-size messages topping out at 140 characters can be smart, useful, maybe even necessary. Here's why I'm looking. CDDP d'Indre et Loire - CDDP 37 - Tours. Mashup Awards - best mashups on the web. Twitter: What are you doing?