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Current Topic: MemeStreams |
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Topic: MemeStreams |
7:16 pm EDT, May 30, 2005 |
Decius just posted a code update, which clears up some minor annoyances with the recommend function. 1. Escapped unicode characters in html selected by the bookmarklet should now be handled properly. 2. When you click recommend in the site there is no longer a pop-up. 3. You can now include HREF links in your posts. Standard html format. Let me know if there are any problems. MemeStreams Update |
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Meme Maps for 'Jeremy', 'Decius', and 'Rattle', September 2001 - March 2005 |
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Topic: MemeStreams |
7:11 pm EST, Mar 14, 2005 |
These are histograms of the timestamps for all entries posted to three MemeStreams: Jeremy, from the first post on October 8, 2001 through the post previous to this one on March 12, 2005; Decius, from the first post on September 5, 2001 through the latest post on March 11, 2005; and Rattle, from the first post on September 8, 2001 through the latest post on March 8, 2005. You'll notice significant differences among the three graphs. The X axis shows time of day (in Pacific time). Each day of the week is shown in a different row and color along the Y axis. The height of each bar in the Z axis represents the cumulative number of posts bearing a timestamp of the corresponding day and time. Meme Maps for 'Jeremy', 'Decius', and 'Rattle', September 2001 - March 2005 |
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NPR : The 'Conspiracy' Art of Mark Lombardi |
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Topic: MemeStreams |
12:43 am EST, Jan 6, 2005 |
] A few weeks after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, an FBI ] agent called the Whitney Museum of American Art and asked ] to see a drawing on exhibit there. The piece was by Mark ] Lombardi, an artist who had committed suicide the year ] before. Using just a pencil and a huge sheet of paper, ] Lombardi had created an intricate pattern of curves and ] arcs to illustrate the links between global finance and ] international terrorism. Something to listen to while you look through the year in graphs. NPR : The 'Conspiracy' Art of Mark Lombardi |
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2004 Statistics for www.memestreams.net |
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Topic: MemeStreams |
11:52 pm EST, Jan 2, 2005 |
Since 2002 we've been publishing the httpd log statistics for this site on an annual basis. This gives you some insight into traffic levels, popular pages, and the kinds of search results that bring people to MemeStreams. From the time we went online (in the fall of 2001) until September of 2003 we saw a fairly constant growth in the number of unique visitors using this site. This year that pattern has changed. The growth, as measured in terms of unique visitors, seems to have leveled off shy of 30,000 people a month, and this year we settled into a static pattern typical of older websites, where more traffic is received in the winter months than in the summer months. As our site is current events focused we also get an occasional boost from popular news stories. However, while the same number of people are using MemeStreams as were using it a year ago, those people seem to be using it a lot more. In September of 2003 we got 27,825 unique visitors, who visited 101,041 pages on the site. In November of 2004 we got 27,496 unique visitors, but they visited 155,421 pages on the site. Truth be told, this is probably a more significant change. A lot of those 27 thousand people wash in from a search engine looking for something specific and never return. The vitality of this site is more dependent on the people who stick around a while and actually make use of it. Those people seem to be growing in numbers even as the overall total remains the same. The main page of the site was hit 259,011 times this year, which works out to about 708 times a day. Thats up from 148,826 last year (which is 408 times a day). Also, in 2003 29% of our traffic came from search engines and 33% came from bookmarks. This year 19% came from search engines and 57% came from bookmarks. 2003 saw the birth of the referrer spammer and they are not going away. The 5 "links from an external page" listed here were the only ones that made the top 20 who I'm absolutely sure aren't spammers. (Honestly, the Netnewswire link may be considered spam, as it is offered by that RSS reader, but its somewhat interesting data and not exactly the same thing as robots that hit your site over and over with no interest in fetching the content.) If you're interested, you can find the links to older annual statistics here: http://www.memestreams.net/allabout.html Happy New Year! 2004 Statistics for www.memestreams.net |
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Memestreams.net 'Its dot com!' |
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Topic: MemeStreams |
5:30 pm EDT, Oct 6, 2004 |
Memestreams.com now points to Memestreams.net... and there was much rejoicing! Memestreams.net 'Its dot com!' |
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Statistics of www.memestreams.net for 2003 |
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Topic: MemeStreams |
12:46 am EST, Jan 6, 2004 |
Here it is folks, the 2003 usage statistics for Memestreams.net! As you can see, the site is continuing to grow. Its worth comparing this with the statistics from 2002, which are at http://www.memestreams.net/awstats.html The monthly usage graph is drawn to scale, so keep in mind that the usage in Jan 2003 is greater then the usage in Dec 2002. Scale the graphs in your head and you can see the progression. We are still trucking forward, and yet we are still very much in the early part of a network effects curve. This years Unique Visitors number is just a little over an order of magnitude larger then last year's. I hope to see another order of magnitude increase next year. An interesting thing occurred in September of 2003. We got referral spammed. This means that a group of people set up robots which hit our site and claimed to be a web browser which came in from a link on a site that these people are trying to advertise. As a result I can't show you the statistics for referrals from other websites. They are spammed out. This also means that there was a bit of a spike in the overall numbers in September. The later months of the year were also impacted by the holidays. People simply tend to use the internet a lot less over Thanksgiving and Christmas. In any event, hope you find this all interesting, and Happy New Year! Statistics of www.memestreams.net for 2003 |
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MemeStreams makes you smarter! |
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Topic: MemeStreams |
11:30 pm EST, Mar 9, 2003 |
] This section involves two tools, one for Windows, and one ] for OSX, which allow you to select text in any ] application, hit a hot key, and receive search results ] for that text. Both tools perform Google searches, and ] both have been adapted to perform MemeStreams searches as ] well. ] ] The power of these tools is that they extend searching ] such that it becomes a kind of augmented knowledge ] system. When you are reading or writing something, and ] you come upon a subject that you want more information ] about, you can get access to more information at the ] touch of a mouse. MemeStreams makes you smarter! |
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MemeStreams has RSS support! |
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Topic: MemeStreams |
4:07 pm EST, Feb 27, 2003 |
This is extremely belated. You may have noticed the orange XML icons in the lower right corner of some of the MemeStreams pages. We've added RSS support. This means you can view MemeStreams using RSS aggregators and headline scrollers (AmphetaDesk, NewsMonster, Faust's Friend). The topic pages and user weblogs are supported. The XML icons link to the RSS output. However, you can reach it by adding "?type=rss" to the end of a MemeStreams URL. Rattle did this feature in some sort of insane 24 hour coding binge. He deserves props. [rattle: "Its time I got back.. Its time I got back.. And I don't even know how I got off the track.." -weezer] You can now submit your MemeStreams page to weblog aggregators like Blogdex and Daypop. We'll be turning the main page in to these services this weekend. MemeStreams has RSS support! |
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Ross Mayfield's Weblog: Looking at weblog networks |
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Topic: MemeStreams |
1:16 am EST, Feb 23, 2003 |
] A link to a site you read isnt the same as a link to ] someone you know through their blog or someone you ] actively collaborate with. ] ] After reviewing data of work relationships, information ] flows and knowledge exchanges from hundreds of consulting ] assignments inside Fortune 2000 organizations Valdis ] Krebs did not see much evidence of power laws in this ] data. His data is of confirmed ties [both persons ] agreed/recognized their mutual ] interactions/flows/relationships] from a worldwide pool ] of clients dating back to 1988. Of course he found some ] people were better connected than others, but the extreme ] hubs found in power law networks just were not evident. Ross Mayfield's Weblog: Looking at weblog networks |
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Finding emerging fads in blog data |
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Topic: MemeStreams |
6:10 pm EST, Feb 19, 2003 |
] Searching for sudden "bursts" in the usage of particular ] words could be used to rapidly identify new trends and ] sort information more efficiently, says a US computer ] scientist. Finding emerging fads in blog data |
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