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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There’s a war going on on Twitter and it has a hue.

We used to play color wars at summer camp. Near the end of the year the entire camp would split up into colors, red, green, black, blue, etc… and compete in a series of events: tug of war, egg toss, basketball…
zeFrank
I LOVE the idea of playing games on twitter.
So I started a thread using the concept of chain stories which I think would work really well within the 140-character medium.
Here’s how it went (read bottom to top):

Some immediate issues surfaced:
- There has to be mutual follow-ship between the participants (the penultimate post on the above screenshot was tweeted by someone I wasn’t following and I didn’t see it at the time it was posted)
- Simultaneous posting from more than one participant (is likely and it…) breaks the thread (if facilitated by @replies)
- Likewise, delayed posting also breaks the thread
- It’s just generally difficult to follow the thread of the story
Possible solutions:
- Limit the game to two participants
- Set up a group and have people tweet to that somehow (this wouldn’t totally solve the simultaneous posting problem)
- Let the game descend into anarchy from time to time - use hashtags to follow the story rather than @replies
I’m inclined to take the latter approach. As long as an individual is monitoring the thread they could draw everything back together if tweets got out of control. Alternatively, the story could be allowed to branch off by changing the hashtag (#story, #story1, #story2 etc).
Ultimately for a game like this to work, it has to be spontaneous and simple. I’ll give it another try at some point and document it here.
Some other game ideas:
- Word of the day: challenge people to include a specified (really obscure) word in their tweets
- Web treasure hunt: clues build up a picture and participants have to identify a digital artifact and link to it
- Degrees of separation: get from one person/thing/place etc to another in as few ‘degrees’ as possible
- I’m NOT going to suggest Mornington Crescent as that would be far to geeky
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Tag Clouds. Huh. What are they good for? Absolutely nothing.
@spxdcz
Tag clouds have suffered from designers/developers over-enthusiastic adoption of web 2.0 tricks. But when they are used appropriately they can be an intuitive and fun navigation method.
iStockPhoto
flickr.com/photos/tags
But why don’t they use tag clouds on this site?
I’ll add more examples and assign star ratings as and when I come across them.
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