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...
123. Facebook statisztika / vizualizáció /... →
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...
Interactive Infographic Visualizes Twitter... →
Cool, isn’t it?
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...
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,...