Writer's Market 2011

Adbrite

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Anatomy of Facebook | Facebook

While we will never know if it was true in 1929, the scale and international reach of Facebook allows us to finally perform this study on a global scale. Using state-of-the-art algorithms developed at the Laboratory for Web Algorithmics of the Università degli Studi di Milano, we were able to approximate the number of hops between all pairs of individuals on Facebook. We found that six degrees actually overstates the number of links between typical pairs of users: While 99.6% of all pairs of users are connected by paths with 5 degrees (6 hops), 92% are connected by only four degrees (5 hops). And as Facebook has grown over the years, representing an ever larger fraction of the global population, it has become steadily more connected. The average distance in 2008 was 5.28 hops, while now it is 4.74.

Posted via email from dennyhariandja's posterous

Monday, November 14, 2011

CNN’s redesigned iReport will look more like a social network than a news site | Poynter.

Pew: Fox News leads in Twitter engagement, while most news orgs just share links | Poynter.

Texas newspaper begins printing Twitter, Facebook contacts with each story | Poynter.

Choosing a strategy for content: 4 Ws and a H | Online Journalism Blog

How A ‘Business Class’ And ‘Economy Class’ For News Sites Would Look | paidContent

Information Architects – Business Class: Freemium for News?

Twitter: A self-promotion tool for mainstream media | The Digital Home - CNET News

Introducing the Guardian's new Facebook app | Help | guardian.co.uk

Thursday, January 20, 2011

MediaShift Idea Lab . A Brief History of Newsgames: Combining News + Videogames | PBS

The newsgames project, which this year won a News Challenge grant, began two and a half years ago with a single question: What is the relationship between videogames and journalism? With the help of the two dozen fellow students at Georgia Tech who've joined us over the past five semesters, we identified and explored seven categories of newsgames on our class blog and in our book, "Newsgames: Journalism at Play". Below is a brief overview of the book in order to encourage people to read the findings of our research.

Posted via email from dennyhariandja's posterous

MediaShift Idea Lab . What Can Virtual Goods Teach Us About Paying for News? | PBS

Why will people spend $1 to send you a virtual beer on Facebook, but not to read a news story online?

Posted via email from dennyhariandja's posterous