Rough analysis of start-dates for and topical categories of the world’s 50 most powerful blogs (BONUS: indie-journalists)

I found the article in my ‘to read’ pile the other day. The Guardian, back in March, wrote an article listing the 50 most influential blogs in the world (link below).

As I was reading it, I started wondering when most of these blogs were started (though no idea how influence was measured). About 2/3 of them had some sort of date mentioned in their blurb, on their site, or discoverable via their archives. The remaining 1/3 required a trip to the Wayback Machine to get an idea of when the first pages were put up (this would likely push the start date later, right?).

Date spread

Nonetheless, in this rough way, I charted out the years when these blogs were started and noticed a few interesting patterns. For example, almost half of them (about 45%) were started in 2004-2005, which were really they hey-days of blogs (at least to me, based on news coverage of the trend and people at the time). Also, most sites were over 3 years old, meaning that it does indeed take time to build a readership and influence.

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Topical categories (I wasn’t going to go this far, but this article begged for more analysis)

In terms of subject matter, political blogs were the largest single category (9 of them). Gossip and celebrity sites were the next most popular subject (7). While I thought tech would dominate (there were only 5), there were also many women-focues sites (6), many in diary format. And, lastly, there were some sites focused on causes (4) such as Tibet or environmentalism.

Yes, this makes sense that sites would focus on specific topics to get a steady readership. While politics, gossip, women, and tech were the main categories, there were a sprinkling of topical sites (11), spread out over food, fashion, sex, humour, football, music, blogging, and intellectual matters.

50 Most Influencial Blogs Tally 03Jun08.NumbersAlso, there were some sites that were general (8), revolving around the curiosity and rambling of the author. It didn’t seem that the authors had a particularly strong personality, but just were interesting people who pointed out interesting things. There is an area of interest for each writer, though, that most of their posts revolve around, say design, marketing, family, or style. That might provide just enough traction to let them bring in other aspects of their life, yet keep their readership’s attention.

Furthermore, of the different topics above, many (10) were basically in the format of personal diaries (yay, blogs still live!). Also, many of them have a single writer, or 2-3 writers. But a few are indeed blogs in the guise of mainstream media (or is it the reverse?) with writer pools, hard-hitting reportage, and oodles of money from advertising and sponsorships.

What do you think of this breakdown? Does it make sense to you?

Eh, I never thought I’d do such meta-analysis of blogs, especially in 2008. But it was a curious article and the data was just there for the picking. Heh.

Link: The world’s 50 most powerful blogs | Technology | The Observer

From Prince Harry in Afghanistan to Tom Cruise ranting about Scientology and footage from the Burmese uprising, blogging has never been bigger. It can help elect presidents and take down attorney generals while simultaneously celebrating the minutiae of our everyday obsessions. Here are the 50 best reasons to log on

BONUS: At work, I cringe when we talk about ‘bloggers’ (that’s so 2005). I think that makes us focus on the tool format instead of the folks we want to work with. While some have started saying ‘influencers’, I find that fawning. The reality is that corporations want relationships with journalist, folks who publish ‘media’ (video, photos, text, audio) that tell a story about the corporations’ products and services.

Debi Jones was thinking that if movie-makers that were not part of the mainstream movie industry are called ‘indie movie makers’, then why can’t non-mainstream media journalists be called ‘indie-journalists’? If you look at the categories above, that’s indeed what most of these writers are.

I like it and try to use it at work as much as possible. What do you think?

Billion-dollar life sciences bill passes Massachusetts Senate

86921507 22B3240378 BDoes Massachusetts need a stimulus in biotech? I don’t think so. It’s doing pretty well.

This bill sounds like a bone thrown to biotech biz leaders around the state. One person in the article below even uttered the p-word “pork”.

Oink oink, indeed.

On the plus side, maybe I should be thinking of heading back. That’s a lot of moolah to go around.

Link: Billion-dollar life sciences bill passes Senate; governor to sign Monday – Local News Updates – The Boston Globe

“I just remind you that it’s the taxpayers that are paying. … It’s taxpayers’ money, it doesn’t grow on trees,” he said.

Image from extrudedaluminiu

Alex bopped me with a baton – lifestreams, semantics, and tapping the next person

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Henriette Weber Kristiansen and Duarte Velez Grilo have a little show called Geek Army Knife. I see it as a wander through the collective mind, talking to interesting people. One interesting feature of the show is that each interviewee needs to come up with who might be the next person to interview, sort of like passing the baton.

Alex de Carvalho was the previous person interviewed, and spoke about social objects. I was absolutely flattered when he passed the baton to me.

So, yeah, I got interviewed last night and it’s already up. I spoke about lifestreaming and how it led me to thinking about semantics. I mentioned a bunch of folks along the way, including Friendfeed, Socialthing, Socialbrain, Lovelysystems, and Tagcrowd.

I’ve also names a few potential folks to pass the baton to, but pressed for my first choice, Stephanie Rieger.

Let’s hope she accepts. If she doesn’t, you might want to listen to the podcast to see if you made the list of alternates (and no offense if you did, I could only pick one and I like so many of you, heh).

Image from Philo.

Kevin Kelly and the New Rules of the New Biology

Kevin Kelly whipped up 9 rules for the Century of Neo-Biology (that label thrills me).

I reproduce them here, but you might want to head over to his post (link below) to leave other rules there too.

1) All rules in biology have exceptions.

2) Anything that can be done with organisms (including our own), will be done.

3) Every biological action invokes a biological reaction.

4) All inovations follow a one-way migration from enhancements to normalcy.

5) One person’s biological ideal is another’s horror.

6) Understanding is not necessary for use.

7) The tolerence for uncertainty goes up as death becomes certain.

8) The difference between 99% reliable and 100% reliable is God (or a million years of evolution).

9) Health care is finite resources applied to an infinite appetite.

from: Kevin Kelly — The Technium

I left the following comment

0) Biology is messy

Some folks think biology behaves properly and regularly like electronics (which we all know is a passing fad). Go into any laboratory and you will see the modern-day alchemist repeating experiments that work one day and not the other, joking about the phases of the moon or position of the chairs.

Do I feel this way because it is so early in the neo-biology game? Am I just an old fuddy-duddy who learned biology in the previous century?

I think that’s irrelevant. Digital electronics have distracted us from the analogue world, such that when we turn our attentions to biology, we’ve forgotten how to think in gradients, thresholds, probability, or chaotic flows in regulatory networks. Indeed, the biochemistry I learned and did was all about this and it’s a thrilling way of doing things. I think those with strong digital sensibilities will have a hard time embracing the uncertainty and variability so common in biological systems.

Does Anyone Use Phone Booths Anymore?


A long forgotten phonebooth
Originally uploaded by schickr

PhoneBoy asks this question (link below). Indeed, I think the folks who have been ramping down their phonebooth assets were so narrow-minded (as in ‘phone booth are for folks who need a to place a call and do not have a phone’) that they blew a golden opportunity.

In telecomms, one perennial battle is for locations to put stuff – poles and pipes for wires, plots of land for towers and dishes, rights-of-way for repair trucks, and little squares of sidewalk for phone booths.

About two years ago I came up with some (IMHO) great ideas on how to use phone booth. For starters, there is still a place for them everywhere for quiet space for the talker or for peace for those around the talker. Indeed, on some Finnish trains there are phone booth for folks to use with their mobile so as not to disturb the passenger. I use it all the time for privacy.

It take no genius to realize what one can do with a booth if someone is sitting there for 3 minutes or more (and PhoneBoy is asking the right questions). It can also be a booth for offering other services, such as booth-only WiFi (to make the person come into the booth), or directory information.

The hard part of setting up a service like that today is securing the little plot of sidewalk. But the phone booth guys already had all that: location, a wire coming in, electricity.

And the telcos and their partners blew it all thinking that we don’t need phone booths anymore.

Link: Does Anyone Use Phone Booths Anymore?

Maybe instead of ripping out the hardwired phones from these phone booths, maybe they can leave them there as a reminder of days gone by or for those times when you need a little bit of piece and quiet when you’re trying to make a call? Or better yet, turn them into pico cells for the mobile network operators?

What’s it with movie super-heroes sulking on building ledges?

Photos From DaredevilHeh. I’ve noticed recurring imagery of super-heroes crouched on a building rooftop, on the ledge, usually in the rain, usually moping. It is also usually followed by the hero jumping off to do their thing.

So far I’ve seen it in:

  • Daredevil – It’s raining. he does a great dive, parkoursing in Daredevil’s signature way (BTW, he’s my favourite super-hero*)
  • Underworld – I only saw the trailers (shame). But Kate Beckingsale is on the movie poster for both movies, looking over a roof-top ledge. I think in Evolution, she does the Leap thing.
  • Spiderman – Spidey usually hangs from buildings, but there’s at least one scene in the last one of him in his new (evil) suit, on a spire of a building.
    • Photos From Underworld

    Batman – There is always a scene of the Dark Night looking over the city and then jumping off.

  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles – These boys are the original traceurs.
  • Dark Angel the TV series – Didn’t most episodes end up with her on the Seattle Space Needle? And if I recall she was on the Needle in the opening credits, too.

And some non-super-heroes that are almost super-heroes to me that jump off buildings:

  • Bourne Ultimatum – Jason Bourne falls off a building and into a river, in a sort of phoenix progression.
  • The Saint – Simon Templar (darker in the movie than I remember the TV series) has a sort of phoenix moment where he falls into a frozen river and is (lucky dude) revived by Dr Russell (a hot physicist, played by Elisabeth Shue).

 

Photos From Spider-Man 3

I think part of this is the super-hero looking over the city, as an unwanted, un-thanked protector. The standing at the ledge is a symbol of fearlessness, a standing on the precipice, yet ready to confront what is at the bottom. And the Leap is a suicide, through which the hero comes out like a pheonix reborn, once again to do their Thing.

Have any of you seen this too? Any other movies or comics or books where this metaphor is used? Indeed, in some of my own stories, I have the hero jumping off the building, mostly due to the dramatic nature of plummeting from a building but surviving.

*Huh. Just realized that most of these super-heroes are unloved, tragic heroes. I also like heroes who really are not content with their marginalized existence, who get the krap beaten out of them all the time, and who despite it all still get up in the evening to do their derring-do  (in a Philip Dick sort of way). Anti-hero anyone?

Images from IMDB (Underworld), IMDB (Daredevil),  IMDB (Spiderman 3)

 

Awesome Clay Shirky interview (with a side-comment that cuts too close)

Clayshirky
Glenn Fleishman did a great interview (back in March) of Clay Shirky on the topics in Clay’s new book ‘Here Comes Everybody’.

Clay, as always, has some great stories to tell. Glenn is pretty good too. Yeah, you should go and download the interview from Glenn’s pages (link below).

The whole interview is great, but it was the very end that made me reel. Glenn asked Clay what business could do to take advantage of the participative nature of the Web. I overly simplify, but Clay, among other comments, mentioned that instead of proclaiming the next great thing in a press release and putting all the money into one pot, that companies spread the money across many endeavors and see what sticks (and do it without fanfare). Basically, have many experiments, put it out there, and see if folks like it rather than gab about it (Show vs Tell?). He uses the example of Wikitorial.

Gosh. I have lots to add to that and a few more examples. (My tongue is bleeding, I am biting it so hard. Though a beer can loosen it, in case you are interesting in a tale of enlightenment, abandonment, discovery, creativity, stealing, cluelessness, and dissapointment.)

While I hope that some companies hear what he has to say and take the learning to heart, I fear that most, as Clay points out, will end up focusing on the wrong thing. Or, as Glenn says, miss the elephant parade passing in front of them.

Sigh.

Hey, I’m just road-kill on the info superhighway. Go listen to some smart people (the link is below, in case you forgot).

Link: TidBITS Blog Post: The Internet Organizes Itself: Here Comes Everybody

I sat down with Clay on 14-Mar-08 to talk about the book for a short article that appeared in the Seattle Times, focused on the business side of his book. However, the Seattle Times allowed me to publish a podcast of our roughly 40-minute conversation.

As an aside: Clay does validate some thoughts I’ve been having. It’s always nice to inadvertently come to the same conclusions as others smarter than me.

Image from Joi Ito

More Earth presence on Mars

Call me an optimist, but I think it’s inevitable that Earth-folk will eventually be wandering over Mars. Eh, not sure if it will happen in my lifetime or in my children’s. I’m taking a long term view on this.Picture 1-4

But last night, one more entry has been made in the time line: NASA set down a lander in the Mars arctic region.

I had comletely forgotten about it until I noticed an article in the Boston Globe. When I went to the mission site I found out that landing was immanent (but on the middle of my night). Of course, being the geek that I am, when I woke up the next morning I flipped open the computer to see what images were to be seen.

The one below seemed most interesting. Note the scalloped pattern to the dirt. Alas, what I hate about this pics is the lack of scale. When the first rover pics came in, things looked big and daunting, only to find out that they were tiny rocks and such. Sigh.

Nonetheless, I find this all exciting.

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