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your krishna

Data Enrichment is a Key Factor for Enhancing Your Business Growth - Yahoo! Voices - vo... - 0 views

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    The concept from where Data Enrichment services came into existence and the role it plays for your business development
your krishna

Web Mining for Reinforcing Your Business - 0 views

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    Data mining and its significant aspects. Besides, it also describes the rising need of web mining and the gradual growth of the data mining sector
Derik Dupont

New Nielsen Data Likely to Shock Some Web Publishers - Advertising Age - Digital - 0 views

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    With Nielsen's update to its @Plan system, some big sites are getting a shock and seeing wide swings from what the old data said about their audiences.
Ryan Holman

The Threat of Silence: Meet the groundbreaking new encryption app set to revolutionize ... - 1 views

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    "Back in October, the startup tech firm Silent Circle ruffled governments' feathers with a "surveillance-proof" smartphone app to allow people to make secure phone calls and send texts easily. Now, the company is pushing things even further-with a groundbreaking encrypted data transfer app that will enable people to send files securely from a smartphone or tablet at the touch of a button. (For now, it's just being released for iPhones and iPads, though Android versions should come soon.) That means photographs, videos, spreadsheets, you name it-sent scrambled from one person to another in a matter of seconds." In an age where we can pretty much assume we're being monitored 24/7, is this a good thing? Or is this another tool for some really terrible people to do some really terrible things, but now with an added layer of privacy?
Kristen Iovino

Books Statistics - Worldometers - 0 views

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    New book titles published this year, based on statistics from UNESCO. Real time data broken down by country.
arnie Grossblatt

Survey Shows Growing Strength of E-Books - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Latest data on US sales of print and e-books.
arnie Grossblatt

June E-Sales Soften - If You Call Double "Soft" | Publishing In the 21st Century - 0 views

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    Latest data on sales of ebooks.
arnie Grossblatt

PLoS Medicine: The Haunting of Medical Journals: How Ghostwriting Sold "HRT" - 1 views

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    Troubling data on how Big Pharma corrupts STM publishing.
Lindsey Hayes

YouTube - The Machine is Us/ing Us (Final Version) - 0 views

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    How data has evolved... very interesting!
arnie Grossblatt

The Short-Term Influence of Free Digital Versions of Books on Print Sales - 1 views

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    Some data on the lift of sales from the provision of free copies.
arnie Grossblatt

Rough Type: Nicholas Carr's Blog: The remains of the book - 1 views

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    Nick Carr (of "The Shallows") is skeptical of the Kindle Fire's new "X-Ray" feature. He writes, "A person of the web may see X-Ray as a glorious advance. A person of the book may see the technology as a catastrophe."
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    Nicholas Carr, author of "The Shallows", raises another alarm about enhanced reading tools for e-books, but what doesn't like may be just what others find most compelling about e-books.
eileencavanagh

When Data Disappears - 0 views

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    LAST spring, the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas acquired the papers of Bruce Sterling, a renowned science fiction writer and futurist. But not a single floppy disk or CD-ROM was included among his notes and manuscripts. When pressed to explain why, the prophet of high-tech said digital preservation was doomed to fail.
Thelisha Woods

Did Bing Just Leapfrog Yahoo Search? - washingtonpost.com - 0 views

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    Data from monitoring service StatCounter suggests that Bing , Microsoft's new search decision engine, has overtaken Yahoo Search as the number two search service in the U.S. and worldwide in large part thanks to stealing market share from leader Google.
arnie Grossblatt

The best report ever on media piracy | Felix Salmon | Analysis & Opinion | Reuters.com - 1 views

  • he big forces driving media piracy in developing countries are real and powerful and will not be changed, no matter how many western politicians get on their moral high horses and insist that countries like India and China build a “culture of intellectual property.” But the irony is that if governments and corporations really wanted to build such a culture, then they would encourage companies to set their prices low enough that the populations of those countries could actually afford to buy music, movies, and software at the full legal retail price. It turns out that domestic companies are quite good at distributing media at low prices, and can build profitable businesses by doing that. But foreign companies have different incentives in the short term, and don’t do that.
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    Data-grounded research on the costs of media piracy developing economies.
Ryan Holman

Understanding Users of Social Networks - HBS Working Knowledge - 1 views

shared by Ryan Holman on 30 Sep 09 - Cached
  • "No one uses MySpace" To continue on the issue of online representation of offline societal trends, Piskorski also looked at usage patterns of MySpace. Today's perception is that Twitter has the buzz and Facebook has the users. MySpace? Dead; no one goes there anymore. Tell a marketer that she ought to have a MySpace strategy and she'll look at you like you have a third eye. But Piskorski points out that MySpace has 70 million U.S. users who log on every month, only somewhat fewer than Facebook's 90 million and still more than Twitter's 20 million in the U.S. Its user base is not really growing, but 70 million users is nothing to sneeze at. So why doesn't MySpace get the attention it deserves? The fascinating answer, acquired by studying a dataset of 100,000 MySpace users, is that they largely populate smaller cities and communities in the south and central parts of the country. Piskorski rattles off some MySpace hotspots: "Alabama, Arkansas, West Virginia, Oklahoma, Kentucky, Florida." They aren't in Dallas but they are in Fort Worth. Not in Miami but in Tampa. They're in California, but in cities like Fresno. In other words, not anywhere near the media hubs (except Atlanta) and far away from those elite opinion-makers in coastal urban areas. "You need to shift your mindset from social media to social strategy." "MySpace has a PR problem because its users are in places where they don't have much contact with people who create news that gets read by others. Other than that, there is really no difference between users of Facebook and MySpace, except they are poorer on MySpace." Piskorski recently blogged on his findings.
    • Ryan Holman
       
      This I find interesting: if I read this right, it would mean that if you had something that was of a more local interest and away from the major cities -- the biography of a local football player, a history of local landmarks, a self-published book by a local political figure, etc. -- it might be effective to have a MySpace strategy as well in the mix, which wouldn't necessarily be the first strategy to come to mind.
  • Women and men use these sites differently.
  • Piskorski has also found deep gender differences in the use of sites. The biggest usage categories are men looking at women they don't know, followed by men looking at women they do know. Women look at other women they know. Overall, women receive two-thirds of all page views.
    • Ryan Holman
       
      I'm not entirely sure I agree with their broad characterization of the gender differences in how social networking sites are used, but my evidence to the contrary is also anecdotal and the plural of "anecdote" is not "data." :-)
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • To continue the earlier analogy, "You should come to the table and say, 'Here is a product that I have designed for you that is going to make you all better friends.' To execute on this, firms will need to start making changes to the products themselves to make them more social, and leverage group dynamics, using technologies such as Facebook Connect. But I don't see a lot of that yet. I see (businesses) saying, 'Let's talk to people on Twitter or let's have a Facebook page or let's advertise.' And these are good first steps but they are nowhere close to a social strategy."
arnie Grossblatt

Your Privacy Online - What They Know - WSJ.com - 9 views

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    A must-read series on online privacy by the Wall Street Journal.  If you browse the web, if you write email, if you have an ISP you should know about this  
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    I know we've discussed in class how Google (and other entities) seems to know so much about us, but isn't it a bit naive to assume the opposite? We expose a piece of our private lives in every way: credit cards for example track where we go, where we eat, what we buy, and the like. Even if paying cash at places, we're signing up for list servs, blogs, campaigns, donating to charities that require contact information, filling out surveys. Given this, is it all that surprising that we are being "watched"? I don't think it's possible to function in today's society without exposing much of ourselves (when you want to pay cash somewhere, the bank knows when, where, what time of day you withdrew money), unless we change our names or deliver false information.
Thelisha Woods

DC Government Business Examiner: Web 3.0 - the non-empirical 'linked-data meme' - 0 views

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    Just when people were starting to figure out Web 2.0, here comes Web 3.0!
Tiffany Klaff

Facebook Withdraws Changes in Data Use - 0 views

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    About who owns the content on Facebook.
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