ReadWriteWeb

December 2009 Archives

2010 New Year's Resolutions from the RWW Geeks & Friends

By Jolie O'Dell / December 31, 2009 6:00 PM / Comments

Forget losing weight or finding the perfect life partner: All we want to do is make 2010 the biggest geek-out year ever.

The ReadWriteWeb crew have collectively planned to take over the world next year by honing our nerd super-powers. From programming in Python to building AI houses, we've resolved to be smarter, more curious, more technical and way geekier than we were last year. Read our resolutions, and definitely let us know what you plan to do to be the best geek you can be in 2010.

2009 In Social Media: A Cartoon Review

By Rob Cottingham / December 31, 2009 3:45 PM / Comments

2009cartoonreview_1209.pngIt was the okay-est of times, it was the meh-est of times.

From the election of the first American social media president... to a nod to social media from the mainstreamiest of mainstream media (Oxford Dictionary, for god's sake!)... it's been a big, tumultuous sprawling toddler of a year, prone to tantrums and potty accidents but adorable nonetheless.

Here, then, is 2009 the way it was meant to be remembered... in doodles.

ReadWriteWeb's Top 5 Web Trends of 2009

By Richard MacManus / December 31, 2009 2:00 PM / Comments

Over the last week we ran a series of posts outlining the five biggest Internet trends of this year: Structured Data, Real-Time Web, Personalization, Mobile Web / Augmented Reality, Internet of Things. Effectively this was ReadWriteWeb's State of the Web 2009.

We've now compiled the main points into a single presentation, available on Slideshare and embedded below. You can view the presentation in full screen by clicking the "full" button at the bottom of the presentation. You can also download the presentation as a Powerpoint file. All of the links in the presentation are clickable, should you wish to explore a certain topic more.

Who Uses Social Networks and What Are They Like? (Part 1)

By Sarah Perez / December 31, 2009 12:00 PM / Comments

A study released earlier this year by Anderson Analytics looked into the demographics and psychographics of social networking users on Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, and LinkedIn with a goal of providing marketers with information about users' interests and buying habits as related to their network of choice. The end result is a detailed look at the profiles and habits of social networking users on the web today.

Some of the study's findings echo things we've already heard. For example, Facebook users tend to be old, white, and rich. MySpace users are young...and fleeing. Other info is new: Twitterers are more likely to have a part-time job, LinkedIn users like to exercise and own more gadgets.

Let's Move Away From Social Media and Get Down to Business

By Alex Williams / December 31, 2009 11:00 AM / Comments

Social Business Design_ The Enterprise is Dead. Long Live the Enterprise!.jpgSometimes, it feels like terms we thought had some meaning really don't apply as much anymore.

Take the term "social media," as an example.

It's like every SEO marketer decided that "social media," was the ticket to a sweet consulting gig. Just look at Twitter. You find a lot of social media experts with tens of thousands of followers. Kind of feels like you are looking down a street filled with hucksters.

Most Popular Hulu Video in 2009? It's a Motherlover

By Mike Melanson / December 31, 2009 10:45 AM / Comments

hulu_logo_sep08.pngA year-end thank-you note from Hulu CEO Jason Kilar offered some statistics to show us just how much the nearly three-year-old service has grown.

Back in April, the service became one of the top three Internet video providers, alongside Google - which includes YouTube and Google Video - and Fox, according to comScore. Kilar includes a number of statistics in his note to show that the site has continued its climb in popularity during the rest of 2009.

$7.5 Million: Wikipedia Reaches Fundraising Goal

By Frederic Lardinois / December 31, 2009 10:39 AM / Comments

wikipedia_jan_09.jpgIn what has become a Christmas tradition, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales posted a personal appeal for donations to the Wikimedia Foundation earlier this month. On the first day alone, the nonprofit raised $430,000 from 13,000 people. Today, Wales announced that Wikimedia reached its fundraising goals. In total, the foundation managed to raise $7.5 million. Last year, when Wales posted a similar appeal, the Wikimedia Foundation received $6.2 million from 125,000 donors.

Synchtube: Watch Synchronized YouTube Videos With Your Friends

By Frederic Lardinois / December 31, 2009 9:25 AM / Comments

synchtube_logo_dec09.pngChances are that you are getting at least a few emails and IMs with links to YouTube videos every day. While watching these alone can be fun, Synchtube turns this into a far more social experience. Synchtube allows you to share and discuss a video in real time with up to four of your friends. The first person to enter the room controls the playback and also has the ability to change videos.

Libraries, eBooks, and the Mobile Web: A Long Ways to Go

By Frederic Lardinois / December 31, 2009 8:00 AM / Comments

library_logo_jun09.jpgAccording to a new report from Cambridge University (PDF), students aren't interested in being able to read eBooks and eJournals on their mobile phones. Instead, users are far more interested in opening hours, location maps, contact info, and access to the library catalog. Most respondents were also far more interested in getting alerts by text message than being able to use library resources over the mobile web.

Twitter Trends in 2009: A Retrospective

By Jolie O'Dell / December 30, 2009 9:23 PM / Comments

Although the daily trends on Twitter over the past year have often been silly or even obscene, hindsight has proven to be much more interesting.

WhatTheTrend has compiled a great overview of Twitter hashtags and trending topics. Their Twitter Zeitgeist 2009 gives us food for thought as we move into a new, hopefully less gaming-prone era of examining and measuring what real users are really talking about on the social web. Now, let's talk about Twilight and Michael Jackson. Or, in the choose-your-own-adventure model of blog posts, you can skip to the part where we talk about tech-related trending topics instead.

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