Belated — State of the Blogosphere 2
Filed Under Analysis, Business Life, Successful Blog, Technorati, Trends | 32 Comments
Move Over English
Though I was at a conference, then deathly sick (note the use of hyperbole), when David Sifry came out with his State of the Blogosphere Part 2 — On Language and Tagging, think there is still important data here to get reported for the record. David’s ability to cut through information on the index of 37.3 million blogs to bring coherent thought to the table is a gift he shares several times a year and we should take advantage of it to get the big picture of how our lives are changing.
For this post, I choose to focus on the analysis of the language data.
David Speaks
He begins by offering a few disclaimers about the data set he’s about to offer. Three important caveats he reminds us to keep in the foreground when studying his data.
- First that the automated language software they use may not be perfect and my over- or undercount a particular language or group of languages, due to bugs wthin the software. He follows that comment with a statement that Technorati, however, still feels fairly confident in its reliability across the millions of blogs and posts they index each day.
- One part of the blogosphere, Mr. Sifry is certain that is being under-reported is posts and blogs written in Korean. This is due to the fact that the main services are not indexed by Technorati at this time. A second that is being undercounted to a lesser degree is French language blogs and posts, because Technorati has not yet got a good system for indexing skyblog.
- This third caveat is that Japanese bloggers write shorter posts. This could be due to their predilection to posting from mobile telephone. This fact could be skewing the results of the data that follows making the numbers higher, as the data tracks quantity of posts not length.
Within these caveats, Dave Sifry aso offers this invitation,
if anyone at these (or other) blogging services is interested in being indexed, please drop me a line.
It’s Not Your Blog, It’s Technorati
Filed Under Business Life, Successful Blog, Technorati | 110 Comments
Has Been for a Few Days
At this moment, the message is
Cannot Find Server
Guess our friends, Janice Myint, David Sifry, and their team are very busy.
No judgment just information.
On the other hand, on Thursdays, the Internet always seems to go haywire. Have you noticed that?
UPDATE: IT’S PARTWAY BACK, BUT THE LINK MARKERS AREN’T WORKING AND THE LINK COUNTS AREN’T RIGHT YET.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Related Articles
Put Your 2Cents In–What’s Technorati Worth–Without Janice?
Exploring for Ideas at Technorati
Filed Under Content, Outside the Box, Successful Blog, Tools, Writing | 18 Comments
Going Exploring
I can’t help it. David Sifry hooked me. He did it when he let them name that feature at Technorati Explore. Had he only said, “Okay call it Browse.” Browsing is a nice thing. I’ve even been known to do it. I’ve browsed through books and browsed while waiting. Yes, I know how to Browse.
My life would be so much easier, if only David Sifry had chosen Browse instead of choosing Explore.
But no. My friend, Dave probably was a kid a bit like me. He probably knows the exact appeal of exploring. Maybe he even remembers hearing someone saying, “Where you going?” and answering back “We’re going exploring. Wanna come along?”
Slam dunk marketing that name. Explore. Even better, it lives up to its promise. Read more
Blogosphere Is Now 35.3 Million
Filed Under Business Life, Marketing, Successful Blog, Technorati, Trends | 13 Comments
State of the Blogosphere April 2006
David Sifry posted State of the Blogosphere, April 2006 Part 1: On Blogosphere Growth at the Technorati Weblog today. It’s only been 3 months since David’s last report, and the blogosphere hasn’t shown any signs of slowing–in fact, it continues to double every six months. New weblogs are created at the rate of one per second. That’s one now, and now, and now, and now. AND I TYPE REALLY FAST.
A new word gets coined in this report, I’ll let Mr. Sifry do it himself. Of those that derive from spam, I think this might be my favorite.
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There has been an increase in the overall noise level in the blogosphere during 2006, but aside from a few notable spam storms (”sporms”? Just how far can you take this naming system?) noted in red in the chart above, the high level of interesting, original content being created greatly outweighs the fake or duplicate content listed on splogs.
The Facts:
- Technorati now tracks over 35.3 Million blogs
- The blogosphere is doubling in size every 6 months
- It is now over 60 times bigger than it was 3 years ago
- On average, a new weblog is created every second of every day
- 19.4 million bloggers (55%) are still posting 3 months after their blogs are created
- Technorati tracks about 1.2 Million new blog posts each day, about 50,000 per hour
David Sifry does a remarkable job of providing useful information to bloggers. I use this data regularly to help friends, family, and business clients to understand what blogs are and what impact blogs are having on the Internet and the world we live in.
Who needs this information to understand what you do? How might you package these facts to promote your business? . . . to help your clients promote theirs?
–ME “Liz” Strauss
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David Sifry Writes about the Future–Janice Myint Please Don’t Read It
Explore the Magic Middle with Authority
SOB Business Cafe 04-07-2006
Filed Under Business Life, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog | 1 Comment
Welcome to the SOB Cafe
We offer the best in thinking–articles on the business of blogging written by the Successful and Outstanding Bloggers of Successful Blog. Click on the screenshot to enjoy each selection.
The Specials this Week are
Gary Miller at Blogoplex sends a message to David Sifry and a man named Chris Coffman to find out Gary and Chris seem to claim the same blog, though they’ve never met.
Noel Guinane takes a hard look at the use and uselessness of social network analysis to business.
Javier Cabrera (who has not sent me a comment hug for a very long time–he must be at dinner) shows off his CSS esssentials, which features blogs of high-end design from around the web.
Improbulus explains how the Nextsplogs scam works. If you’ve not heard about this, check it out. This clever new trick uses redirection code to game the Google Next Blog viewing system. Apparently spammers never learned that they’re not supposed to cut in line.
David Starling offers a serious analysis of Google’s current funding and what it means to Google and to us.
Related ala carte selections include
Chartreuse BETA unravels the story of a webcam “grassroots music discovery” who now looks to be a plant by the recording industry. Once again, he saw something wasn’t right there when her popularity first became a big deal.
Sit back. Enjoy your read. Nachos and drinks will be right over. Stay as long as you like.
No tips required. Comments appreciated.
Have a great weekend!
–ME “Liz” Strauss
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