lunes, 3 de enero de 2011

Google zeitgeist 2010, lo más buscado del mundo.

Google zeitgeist presenta un interesante resumen visual de los temas más buscados durante el 2010 organizados en 3 categorías: Global, España y otras regiones.

En apartado Global se puede visualizar los 5 temas mundiales más importantes del 2010 en forma de mapa interactivo: la copa del mundo, los juegos olímpicos, el terremoto en Haití, el derrame de petróleo en el golfo de México y la nube de cenizas del volcán islandés Eyjafjalla.

En el apartado de España se pueden comparar por parejas los 10 términos de las dos subcategorías disponibles: búsquedas y personalidades con mayor crecimiento. (y uno se entera que Sara Carbonero tiene una hermana llamada Cristina que está entre las 10 más buscadas del año...)


Captura de pantalla de Google zeitgeist

domingo, 2 de enero de 2011

Resumen 2011 sociedad+política, medios y negocios

Pepe Cerezo, tiene un interesante blog en cincodias.com en el que escribe sobre la sociedad de la información y el impacto que tiene en la sociedad.

En su post del 23 de diciembre ha resumido en una tabla lo más destacado del año sobre sociedad, política, medios y negocios. Muy interesante. (clic sobre la imagen para ampliarla)

sábado, 1 de enero de 2011

Social Networks vs. Information Networks

This is an abstract of an excellent article written by Ben Parr, co-editor of Mashable about the main difference of Twitter and Facebook. For most all the people they seem social networks, but they are not. Let’s read the main difference:

Social Networks vs. Information Networks
 
This may seem obvious, but social networks are about your social networks. Specifically, the focus is on your friends, colleagues and personal connections. They are about sharing personal or professional experiences together. They are about keeping in touch with friends rather than discovering news or content. Facebook, LinkedIn, Bebo, MySpace, hi5 and Orkut clearly fall under the “social networking” branch of social media.

The concept of an information network is a more recent phenomenon. Information networks are about leveraging different networks to distribute and consume information. While they may utilize an array social media tools in order to find, curate or deliver content, they focus less on what’s happening in your social graph and more on information you want. Twitter may be the best example of an information network, but YouTube (video), Flickr (photos) and Digg (news) are information networks as well.

Pretty much every social media platform has aspects of both types of networks, but they tend to fall into one category or the other. I contend that Foursquare is a social network because it utilizes Facebook’s friend model instead of Twitter’s follow model, but you might have a different opinion.

In fact, that may be the biggest differentiating point between social networks and information networks. For the most part, content on Flickr, YouTube or Twitter is public, while content on MySpace, Facebook or Bebo is private. A big reason for that is that the former services utilize the follow or subscription model, while the latter ones utilize the friend model.

We tend to group Facebook, Twitter and an array of other web tools into one giant pile, when in fact they’re vastly different tools with vastly different applications and uses.

Conclusion
Facebook, with its mutual friend connections and college-exclusive beginnings, is better suited for keeping in touch with friends. For most people, it is indeed a network of your social graph, all in one place.

Twitter, on the other hand, is all about the stream of information coming from people and organizations all across the world. That’s why there’s room for both: they simply provide different functions.