"Yay, I am publishing my Buzzes over to Twitter!!! Here's how I did it... 1. Burn a feed of your public Buzz profile (Feedburner.com is great for this) 2. Push Buzz to Twitter (Twitterfeed.com is great for this) 3. Optimize settings in both apps, e.g. add your Bit.ly API key, etc. 4. Sit back and relax as your Buzz items go to Twitter! See mine here http://Twitter.com/SusanBeebe"
- Susan Beebe
from Bookmarklet
I think it's a tad ludicrous to compare millions of users to two products and services as wildly different as CNN and Twitter and declare "old media" dead. And how exactly is CNN "old" media these days? They're partly responsible for bringing Twitter to the mainstream; they were one of the pioneers using it to interact with their audience in real time. They're complementary, at least in some ways. Neither will destroy the other.
- David Chartier
from iPhone
Cristo - haha funny dude! too bad LOL :D
- Susan Beebe
Zee - yea, I was pretty stoked by that chart, WOW
- Susan Beebe
CNN is old media to me - established news outlet publishing news vs. news published by tweet model :P
- Susan Beebe
I love charts like these....... I wonder what happened around November last year..... hmmm
- Johnny
I also wonder what happened around the middle of January.... hmmmmm
- Johnny
Johnny - great questions! (November last year = Obama :)
- Susan Beebe
January 20th (despite being my birthday) was the inauguration...
- Johnny
Johnny - ah, good call on the Jan spike!
- Susan Beebe
Until Twitter starts funding a world-wide team of journalists, some of whom risk life and limb to report from some of the most dangerous parts of the world, let's not gleefully cheer the demise of "old" media.
- Carter ♥ JS
I am definitely not someone who "gleefully cheer the demise of 'old' media." I am nonetheless aware and impacted by the shift in web traffic, as evidenced here by the graph
- Susan Beebe
I shouldn't have implied that you're gleeful, but many are. It's become somewhat of a game to point these things out. But where would the non-creators of content (Google, Twitter, Facebook) be with nothing to crawl, nothing to RT, and nothing to share? It just worries me, because you're right, "old" media is suffering. The NYT could go broke. Can Twitter supplant them if they go?
- Carter ♥ JS
Carter - thanks for the reply. NYT times going broke would be a tragedy and NO twitter could not supplant them. Twitter is a micro-blogging service, not a mature company like NYT that delivers high quality journalism / news. Heck, twitter can barely keep the lights on (i.e. twitter has weak infrastructure, hence the "fail whale" issues).
- Susan Beebe
Agreed. But we're going to look back in 2012 at all these crashing graphs (http://trends.google.com/website...) and wonder how we could have avoided this mess. Because all the solutions suck (charging for content, mega-mergers for scale, selling-out editorial independence).
- Carter ♥ JS
look what happens when you compare the BBC News site instead of CNN - http://trends.google.com/website... - CNN is just not that popular outside of the US
- James
James, it's not the absolute numbers, it's the *trend*. Plot CNN and BBC and it's the same graph, just shifted up a bit.
- Carter ♥ JS
Ian - wow, that is stunning (facebook really steals the show doesn't it?!)
- Susan Beebe
James - interesting, the BBC vs twitter graph has a similar trend as the CNN vs twitter graph ...hmmm
- Susan Beebe
Just amazing.Useful informations.....
- Brook White
this makes Rupert Murdoch's recent rant at a conference in China even funnier: http://www.businessinsider.com/the-phi... He (and the other members of the Old Media guard like CNN, etc.) really thinks he can take the Web back to a for-pay basis. He doesn't get that 98% of the content his minions are producing is so fungible that the...
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- Alex Schleber
What I find interesting, and disturbing is that not only are Twitters stats going up, but CNNs are going down. Given the self selecting nature of Twitter, that probably means people are exposing themselves to a much narrower range of opinion and information.
- Eoghann Irving
Please don't dance on the grave of print journalism. Yes, newpapers are dinosaurs. And yes, to their detriment, they resisted change in delivery models for too long -- mostly due to the fact that they were making so much money 15 years ago. BUT, without them, there will be a void in investigative journalism that cannot be filled. Politicians still read the big papers to see what's going on in their own government and to see who's investigating whom.
- rowlikeagirl
@Row, I seriously don't want to, but Old Media's wounds are entirely self-inflicted. There will always be investigative journalism, it's just that it needs to be paid for by newer/smarter monetization models. And the pay-wall ain't it.. Murdoch is entirely out of his gourd on this one, and that's not a political statement in this case.
- Alex Schleber
"But Twitter is something different. Its whole raison d'être is to broadcast one's life, thoughts, whims and so on. And if you enable Tweet geotagging, the only time your location will be broadcast to the world is when you choose to send a public Tweet. In other words, if you're already publicly Tweeting an opinion, it's pretty likely that you wouldn't be too protective of the location the Tweet came from (I've already half-jokingly suggested the name Perch for this location). Tweet geotag info could basically become the way that geolocation becomes acceptable to a broader share of the public. And that's pretty exciting. Tied into Twitter's real-time news and opinion mojo, and exploited by some clever, entertaining or useful Twitter-based apps, geotagging really could become Twitter's killer feature."
- Susan Beebe
from Bookmarklet
"If it wasn’t bad enough that Facebook bought FriendFeed on Monday and turned on real-time search to better compete against Twitter in the Stream Wars, and is playing around with a lite version that resembles Twitter even more, now Twitter really has something to worry about. Facebook is growing faster than Twitter in the U.S., even though it is more than four times larger. In the month of July, according to the latest estimates from comScore, Facebook attracted 87.7 million unique visitors in the U.S., which was 14 percent higher than in June, 2009. Twitter, in contrast, only saw 21.2 million unique U.S. visitors to its Website, a 6 percent rise compared to the month before. In absolute terms, Facebook added about ten million new visitors in the month of July versus roughly one million new visitors for Twitter. At 87.7 million uniques, Facebook moves from the sixth largest Web media property in the U.S. to the fifth, passing the combined sites of Fox Interactive Media (80.9 million...
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- Susan Beebe
from Bookmarklet
Attack on Twitter Came in Two Waves - Bits Blog @NYTimesBits (DDoS powered by a botnet + Spam e-mails = twitter outage root cause) - http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009...
*UPDATE* from @Twitter: "Due to defense measures some Twitter clients are unable to communicate with our API, and many users are unable to tweet via SMS."
FWIW: I'm seeing most posts go straigh through to search. I'm viewing search on search.twitter, FF search, Tweetdeck, and PeopleBrowsr (search.peoplebrowsr.com). I'm seeing more lag than usual, but less than 10 minutes in most cases. The odd tweet may take several hours though.
- guruvan (Rob Nelson)
Twitterberry seems to be disabled, SocialScope is intermittent at best...guess I need to give UberTwitter another go.
- Jared Smith
"Yesterday, Twitter, Facebook, LiveJournal, and Google's Blogger were targeted yesterday by a person or persons unknown in a denial-of-service attack (DDOS) which attempted to silence the voice of one individual. The target in question was a Georgian blogger who goes by the name of "Cyxymu" online, according to recent reports from CNET. While Google withstood the attack, the other services suffered. LiveJournal and Twitter went down completely and Facebook struggled throughout the day. As we now roll into day two of the "great social media outage of 2009," you may be surprised to learn that it's not over yet. Although Facebook and LJ have recovered, Twitter is still having issues. Not only was the site down once again early this morning, Twitter developers using the API are complaining the company is sending mixed messages by reporting that they're "back up" when in reality, the ecosystem of Twitter applications are, in many cases, still unusable. This morning, Twitter was once again...
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- Susan Beebe
from Bookmarklet
And Twitter is down in strange and unpredictable ways. Seems that Twitter has real problems with network operations in general. API is working for some not others. I can even Tweet through the web from Safari, but not from Firefox on the same box.
- John
What's interesting is that "whitelisted" IPs don't even work. They blocked everyone, regardless of status.
- Jesse Stay
WOW, that's devastating for all API dependent applications - yikes!
- Susan Beebe
I've had no issues with Twitter since it came back up yesterday afternoon.
- Mathew™ aka Youngblood
twitter's web client users may not notice much now, but folks who develop and/or use twitter client apps that utilize twitter's API, like friendfeed, socialtoo, twitpic, tweetie, tweetdeck, seesmic, peoplebrowsr - are all affected!!!!!
- Susan Beebe
Twitter's own services were affected today as well. It was very clear from watching Twitter.com, search.twitter.com, FriendFeed, Tweetdeck, and PeopleBrowsr, that there are bottlenecks and or drop points within twitter's own network. Tweets sent from API clients (TD, FF, PB, Seesmic et al) were being shown everywhere but twitter.com, and were foten slow getting to search.twitter.com....
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- guruvan (Rob Nelson)
Matthew, I tested extensively with all of the above apps this morning, and found that not all tweets were being sent or received by each of them. There were intermittent failures from each application. Interestingly, the most consistent failure was the twitter.com web site. I was virtually unable to tweet at all with that, and the few tweets that were accepted, were not delivered to API clients for at least 2 hours.
- guruvan (Rob Nelson)
"Twitter was shut down for hours Thursday morning by what it described as an “ongoing” denial-of- service attack, silencing millions of Tweeters the world over. It’s the first major outage the service has had in four months and possibly the first ever due to sabotage. The outage appeared to begin mid-morning, EST, and affected users around the world. In a post that appeared later this morning, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone, gave no indication of how the defense was going, or how long the service might be down in the brief update."
- Susan Beebe
from Bookmarklet
The most interesting apect is how this attack on Twitter is affecting other services.
- Liz
Is there any connection between Twitter being down & Facebook being super buggy this morning? What do you think? Discuss: http://friendfeed.com/susanbe...