Some great statistical reporting from Harvard: New Twitter Research: Men Follow Men and Nobody Tweets.
A little cold water data to throw on the party of the next web cock trumpeting the revolutionary phenomena of Twitter.
Some great statistical reporting from Harvard: New Twitter Research: Men Follow Men and Nobody Tweets.
A little cold water data to throw on the party of the next web cock trumpeting the revolutionary phenomena of Twitter.
Grandiose claims have accompanied the spread of the Internet like wetness accompanies water.
Variously, the Internet was going to democratize production and distribution. Was going to disintermediate incumbents. Was going to revolutionize this or that business and business process.
Sometimes these claims came true. More often, they partially came true. Most often, they partially came to fruition and scared the hell out of people. And always, they remain evolving works in progress.
So when I read an article full of triumphalism like Blogs Falling in an Empty Forest about the failure rate of blogs, I know I’m reading a writer who’s missing the story.
As an example, a year ago you could have read that Consumers were facing shrinking lines of credit from banks.
Washington Mutual, one of the nation’s biggest issuers of second mortgages, said in May that it had reduced or suspended about $6 billion of available credit under existing home equity lines. Countrywide, Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase have made similar moves.
You could also learn that tomatoes contaminated with e-coli bacteria were sickening people in 16 states. But nothing will change and more shit (literally) will get shipped in food.
A mediated worldview emphasizes the far over the near, the exceptional over the mundane and the sensational over the practical.
As a result, people fear dying from terrorist attacks instead of car crashes. We watch reality TV while our natural world degrades.
So while technology has made many things more accessible to us, human nature remains stubbornly resistant to lasting changes. And the changes that get incorporated into our lives seem like they’ve been there for a long time.
The truth remains that anyone can start a blog but few persist. The truth also remains that many people now read and keep blogs and don’t have as much use for the NYTimes.
And this will change too.