Posts Tagged: email


21
Dec 09

Daily Links for December 21st

All excerpts are quoted from the respective link(s).

  • The Value of Sharing: Social Engagement | ShareThis – Even more important than the gross traffic originating from shared links is the social engagement of sharing. When compared to search, sites in our network are seeing up to 50 percent more engagement from sharing. Meaning share-originated links are driving up to 50 percent more page views per unique than search. Search drives a very focused click and is still the standard for intent. We feel influence is a proxy for the new social intent.
  • mental_floss Blog » 6 Great Christmas Comic Book Adventures – You can’t forget the great Christmas songs, movies and television specials. But what of the wonderful, heart-warming Christmases you spent with Archie, Richie Rich, Mickey Mouse and Little Lulu? Even super-heroes sometimes take a break from clobbering super-villains at Christmas. Here are some of the classic holiday stories that have made their way into the comics over the years.
  • Public Looks Back at Worst Decade in 50 Years – Pew Research Center – As the current decade draws to a close, relatively few Americans have positive things to say about it. By roughly two-to-one, more say they have a generally negative (50%) rather than a generally positive (27%) impression of the past 10 years. This stands in stark contrast to the public's recollection of other decades in the past half-century. When asked to look back on the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, positive feelings outweigh negative in all cases.
  • The Only Social Media Metric that Matters – In social media, the most common indicators we use tend to be engagement metrics. The hope is that if a user is going through the site or returning more often than they must be part of the community.

    On Facebook and social media sites, we look to fan counts and interaction. Examples include comments and retweets. These are supposed to indicate a growing and more dedicated community.

    On the surface that seems fine. But these indicators only look at the top level of interaction.

  • DazzleShips – An overview of the process of camouflaging WWI ships.


1
Nov 09

Daily Links for October 30th through November 1st

All excerpts are quoted from the respective link(s).


23
Oct 09

Daily Links for October 22nd through October 23rd

All excerpts are quoted from the respective link(s).

  • Gmail Users are Young, Female; AOL Users are Older – Social media data company Rapleaf has just completed a comprehensive study involving the demographics and behavior of webmail users. In the first part of their study, they looked specifically at age and gender data and revealed some interesting findings. For example, did you know that Gmail has more female users than male? And that Hotmail is the other way around? Meanwhile, AOL users are older…but maybe not as old as you think.

19
Sep 09

Daily Links for September 18th

All excerpts are quoted from the respective link(s).

  • Daily Number: A Scarcity of Car Lovers – Pew Research Center – Americans' romance with the automobile seems to be cooling off a bit. A Pew Research survey conducted in 2006 found that just 23% say they consider their car "something special — more than just a way to get around," barely half of the 43% who felt this way in 1991.

2
Jul 09

Daily Links for July 1st through July 2nd

All excerpts are quoted from the respective link(s).

  • Schneier on Security: Security, Group Size, and the Human Brain – The smallest, three to five, is a "clique": the number of people from whom you would seek help in times of severe emotional distress. The twelve to 20 group is the "sympathy group": people with which you have special ties. After that, 30 to 50 is the typical size of hunter-gatherer overnight camps, generally drawn from the same pool of 150 people. No matter what size company you work for, there are only about 150 people you consider to be "co-workers." (In small companies, Alice and Bob handle accounting. In larger companies, it's the accounting department — and maybe you know someone there personally.) The 500-person group is the "megaband," and the 1,500-person group is the "tribe." Fifteen hundred is roughly the number of faces we can put names to, and the typical size of a hunter-gatherer society.

28
Apr 09

Social Networking and the Next 9/11-Scale Crisis

When I think back to September 11th, my thoughts go back to the impact of technology that day.  I previously had written that the major news sites were down and cable news was simply repeating what little they knew.  I tracked the story by listening to Howard Stern and alternating between Metafilter and FarkWired tells more:

When the world changed on Sept. 11, 2001, the web changed with it.

While phone networks and big news sites struggled to cope with heavy traffic, many survivors and spectators turned to online journals to share feelings, get information or detail their whereabouts. It was raw, emotional and new – and many commentators now remember it as a key moment in the birth of the blog.

When four planes were hijacked on a sunny fall morning, easy-to-use blogging services were still few and far between. Yet many who witnessed the horror of the attacks firsthand took to the keyboard to talk with the world.

Horrified Americans used e-mail, instant messages, any available communication tool. But weblogs meant large audiences, not just friends and family, could read those stories from the scene.

“I have a scrap of paper that flew onto my roof,” wrote New Yorker Anthony Hecht. “Typewritten and handwritten numbers in the millions. A symbol of our tragedy. It smells like fire.”

Many bloggers strayed from their normal writing beats to produce a rolling news service comprising links to materials and tidbits gathered by friends.

Unstructured technology, both in terms of organizing a response, search and rescue/recovery, contacting loved ones, breaking news, or providing updates, has consistently proven to be a strength of the open web and technology enthusiasts.

The question remains – what we will do during the next catastrophe?   Microsoft is thinking ahead, releasing a product named Vine which allows the user via web-connected computer send messages to small and large groups, as well as individuals, and to crowd source data during a crisis.  The idea for Microsoft Vine was incubated by Microsoft GM Public Safety Initiatives Tammy Savage during Hurricane Katrina, with development initiated within the last two years.  Techcrunch explains:

Vine is designed to keep family and friends in touch when other communication methods are either broken or not particularly efficient. Times of crisis usually involve a breakdown in mobile phone or other key communication infrastructures, and Vine is designed to be as hardy as possible to keep people connected. Vine can be accessed via a desktop client (Windows only for now), text message or email.

Status updates via Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and the like are well suited to these short, low bandwidth messages.  I suspect that the infrastructure of those same services (as well as hosted email and webmail) is not sufficiently scaled to handle the millions who will swamp the service in search of news and updates on friends and families.  Also, how well do the mobile offerings suit anticipated needs of users during a crisis?  Further, while I don’t want to be seen as an opportunist, the social capital gained by a site delivering in a crisis could do wonders for registrations, subscriptions, and engagement (and later revenue).

Having a plan is more than smart business, or even shrewd marketing.  In an emergency, we will turn to what is ubiquitous, familiar, and available.  It’s in our national security interest for our social networking sites to be ready.


11
Apr 09

Daily Links for April 10th

  • Jalopnik – Car And Driver Prank Awakens NASCAR To Real World – NASCAR April Fools – Car and Driver, not recently known for either humor or relevance but benefiting from a revival under new EiC Eddie Alterman, reported President Obama had ordered Chevy and Dodge out of NASCAR as part of an April Fool's Day prank. NASCAR didn't get the joke, with many teams, fans, executives and assorted rednecks believing the news. That shock has apparently awoken the above parties to the real possibility of losing the support of two brands most closely associated with going fast and turning left and instead relying on the support of newcomers like Toyota. While NASCAR claims it'd survive both financially and emotionally, we get the feeling that they're pouring a little cheap beer out for their homies at the not-so-Big Three. Humor's always best when it causes the target to get all introspective, thus proving they never really got the joke.

20
Mar 09

Daily Links for March 20th

  • AIG – Paul Krugman Blog – NYTimes.com – This was bad analysis, bad policy, and terrible politics. This administration, elected on the promise of change, has already managed, in an astonishingly short time, to create the impression that it’s owned by the wheeler-dealers. And that leaves it with no ability to counter crude populism.
  • Gmail’s New ‘Undo Send’ Feature Saves You From Outbox Regret | Epicenter from Wired.com – A new feature for Gmail aims to rid your life of that classic "Oh Shit" e-mail moment. "Undo Send" puts a five to 10-second hold on all outgoing messages. If you addressed an e-mail to the wrong person, let slip with an embarrassing typo or simply said something you really, really shouldn't have, Undo Send can be a lifesaver. Or, more accurately, a job-saver.

25
Jan 09

Daily Links for January 24th

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