Chatroulette is The Innertubes Greatest Hope

Broadcatching, Chatroulette, The Innertubes

By Laura Casey
Contra Costa Times

03/12/2010 01:00:00 PM PST

IN LESS THAN an hour I met Tyquan, a 23-year-old military-trained security guard from Brooklyn and 26-year-old Emmy from New Orleans, who showed me her belly dance moves. Mike, a 16-year-old from Texas, wanted to chat with me about college and my job while Lyon, 70, from France just wanted to say “hi.”

The 7 Somewhat United States of Facebook

Facebook, U.S.A.

GIGAOM

Mathew Ingram

Peter Warden, a former Apple engineer, likes to analyze data — so much so that he started scraping public profiles and photos from hundreds of millions of Facebook accounts about a year ago, and now has data collected from more than 200 million around the world. He wrote a fascinating post recently on his personal blog about what that data shows about how interconnected (or disconnected) users in the various American states.

In a nutshell, Warden’s data analysis showed that Facebook users in the U.S. can be roughly segmented into seven regions, which he named facetiously:

  • Stayathomia: This belt’s defining feature is how near most people are to their friends, implying they don’t move far.
  • Dixie: Like Stayathomia, Dixie towns tend to have links mostly to other nearby cities rather than spanning the country.
  • Greater Texas: Unlike Stayathomia, there’s a definite central city to this cluster, otherwise most towns just connect to their immediate neighbors.
  • Mormonia: The only region that’s completely surrounded by another cluster, Mormonia mostly consists of Utah towns that are highly connected to each other, with an offshoot in Eastern Idaho.
  • Nomadic West: The defining feature of this area is how likely even small towns are to be strongly connected to distant cities; it looks like the inhabitants have done a lot of moving around the county.
  • Socalistan: LA is definitely the center of gravity for this cluster. Almost everywhere in California and Nevada has links to both LA and SF, but LA is usually first.
  • Pacifica: Tightly connected to each other, it doesn’t look like Washingtonians are big travelers compared to the rest of the West, even though a lot of them claim to need a vacation.

Of course, Warden’s data — which he collected in the course of analyzing Facebook profiles and fan pages worldwidebecoming more cosmopolitan, according to the most recent demographic survey of Facebook users. Marshall Kirkpatrick has more detail on what Warden is up to in this post. for various corporate customers — only reflects what users of Facebook choose to reveal about themselves, and many don’t include all their friends or other information in their public profiles. As large as it is, Facebook also still represents only a small slice of the American population, and likely a fairly homogeneous slice at that, although the social network is


Bloggers Rush To Put Words "IPhone" and "Google Chrome" in Same Headline

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Web 2.0 afficionados and general internet geeks accross the planet staged a history-making rush of blog posts heralding the new Google browser, Chrome and the cavalcade of programs being written to use it on Apple’s I-Phone.

 

 

 

 

 

Today on Twitter, one mashup nerd excitedly wondered what custom API’s were in the works and a Spore programmer claimed on Tumblr that they would run a version of the new game through Mountain View’s Google servers utilizing Chrome’s mobile capabilities.

Obama Begins The Serious Chicago-Style Political Treatment On Hillary

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unclesam1.jpg

Susan UnPC
From Larry Johnson’s Tremendous Blog : No Quarter

Obama: Screw The Democratic Party »

[[[ Here’s a LATE-NIGHT UPDATE on the cynical politics of the “hope”-panderer: The Obama campaign has repudiated these flyers. But, reports Time’s Mark Halperin (the italics are his), “Obama, in Reno Monday, makes explicit appeal for independents and Republicans to caucus for him.” So, the flyer’s out but the message is still on. ]]]

“Here in Nevada Barack Obama has put out a flyer reading, in part, “You Can Be A Democrat for A Day,” reports Taylor Marsh. who lives and broadcasts in Las Vegas. [UPDATE: Obama’s campaign is doing this nationwide. Here’s an official Florida Obama campaign release on how to be a “Democrat for a Day.”] Then there’s the manipulation by Obama-ite leaders of the Culinary Workers Local 226 in Nevada that forced Obama on union members (more below). (Let’s not forget that Obama dissed unions as “special interests” — that is, when they supported his rivals John Edwards and Hillary Clinton.)

So THIS is Chicago-style politics! Barack Obama, stung by his New Hampshire loss, promised a “Chicago-style smackdown,” and he’s delivered. Beyond tobamaflyer1-1.jpghis shocking invitation to let Republicans invade Democratic caucuses, there’s the disturbing prospect that Republicans — knowing that Obama will be the easiest Democratic nominee to defeat in the general election — will do just that. Gleefully! God almighty. Is Karl Rove advising the Obama campaign now, beyond the pages of the Wall Street Journal? Don’t forget Larry Johnson’s warnings in “Why Are the Rightwing Republicans Hyping Obama?” — which should be re-read by every true Democrat.

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