February 2011
9 posts
Infographic: World Mobile Browser Market Share
futurejournalismproject: Nokia’s share of the world mobile browsing market shows remarkable disparity, and this chart from iCrossing provides good insight into why the Finnish handset giant made a deal with Microsoft to start running Windows Phone 7 on its devices. Nokia’s Symbian OS runs nearly half of all phones in Tunisia, and in Egypt, this figure climbs to 80 percent, but figure is quite...
Feb 28th
30 notes
123. Facebook statisztika / vizualizáció /... →
Feb 23rd
1 note
Samuel Axon: Former Engadget and Mashable Editor:... →
futurejournalismproject: samuelaxon: Former Engadget and Mashable Editor: “Web Journalism Is a Joke”  I’ve heard the argument that we’ve “redefined” journalism, but semantics aside, we’re either profit-seekers or truth-seekers. We’re either entertainers or informers. No one can be both unless the game rules are changed. I’m tired of seeing TechCrunch’s Michael Arrington and Huffpo’s Arianna...
Feb 21st
36 notes
Interactive Infographic Visualizes Twitter... →
Cool, isn’t it?
Feb 19th
Feb 19th
2 notes
Feb 13th
Presentism in Google Books →
Google’s new Ngram Viewer is a graphical interface for looking at the frequency of words over time in the several million books scanned into their database.  As a publicly mine-able data set, it’s huge and ripe for exploration with 500 years’ worth of published books spanning several languages.  And while it may seem a simple ‘just so’ kind of information to be able to call up how often a word was...
Feb 13th
What Social Media Meant to Egypt's Revolution →
futurejournalismproject: Josh Bernoff via Forrester’s Empowered blog: Malcolm Gladwell is right that without real people taking real risks, there is no revolution. Signing up for a cause on Facebook doesn’t make a big difference in itself. And there were lots of other factors, including coverage in Al Jazeera, that made a big difference. But the Egyptian revolution took off more quickly,...
Feb 11th
8 notes
Feb 11th
5 notes