Frustratingly, I can’t see a way to embed it into this post…
jenny-bee.net/2008/04/22/buzzdaq/
Hi Jenny
Thanks for looking at our Buzzdaq, it was a great idea to add an embed code. If you take a look now, you’ll notice we’ve added one one on there now!
jenny-bee.net/2008/04/22/buzzdaq/#comment-131
Nice one Refreshed Media.
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This is quite PR-y but a nice idea none-the-less.
Refreshed Media unveil their latest digital breakthrough called Buzzdaq, which … allows visitors to see, at a glance the most mentioned words from hundreds of specially selected blog and news articles.
All feeds are taken from the blogs or news items of sites relevant to the internet community… These are drawn from an RSS feed and displayed through the Buzzdaq application which can then be bookmarked to share with others.
From socialmediaportal.com
Frustratingly, I can’t see a way to embed it into this post, but you can sample the delights of Buzzdaq on the Internet World website.
I’m wondering whether something like this could be used to measure the buzz around specific conferences (related post: I want it ALL (in one place)!).
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I collated some brief thoughts about last night’s Chinwag Live: Measuring Social Media and was going to publish them this evening.
Thought I’d check the blogosphere first to make references n’ dat and found that most of what I was going to say had already been articulated far more effectively by considerably more intelligent people than me.
So (in true social-media-analytics styleee) here’s the Google blog search results. The rest is up to you!
My tuppence worth: reckon a social media metrics hack day might be in order.
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There have been a couple of posts commenting on the apparent uselessness of web 2.0/social media web apps recently.
Mike Ellis commented that:
None of these tools (Twitter, Jaiku, Tumblr etc) actually adds anything… All of these tools do add huge amounts of noise, but to me none of them add signal… they’re not doing anything useful for me.
All noise, no signal. Lifestreaming is a timesink
And then godofbiscuits79 commented that Google Reader is ‘not bad though fairly pointless’.
The last comment I’ll put down to web 2.0 naïvety (godofbiscuits79 is my little brother - it would be wrong of me not to take the opportunity to tease him a little about this) but both these comments got me thinking.
Genuine human relationships are essentially useless. Most of us don’t form connections with people because of a transactional value (apart from some business contacts perhaps). My relationships with my friends are based on shared interests or opinions or outlook on life. Sure, some of those relationships come with benefits (like knowing music industry people who can source tickets to sold out gigs ;) ), but these relationships still only last if there is some genuine connection between the parties involved.
At the moment, most of the ‘friends’ I have in online social networks fit into the description above - they are people I share interests, opinions or outlook with. This means social media for me is essentially useless as it facilitates relationships that are essentially useless. But that’s what I like about it the most.
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I was at the PRWeek PR, Social Networking & Blogging in Practice conference yesterday.
To be honest, I was sceptical beforehand and my scepticism was at first confirmed by being one of only about 5 people with a laptop, and there being no free wi-fi. Am I too ‘un-conferenced’ these days?
Anyway, in actual fact the day turned out to be extremely useful with a consistently high calibre of speaker and a few genuinely interesting case studies.
Abbreviated notes and comments:
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