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In this blog, we share trials, attempts to understand the emerging "revolution" of the WEB 2.0, online social networks like Facebook, Twitter and Youtube.
sábado, 15 de setembro de 2007
Software Social: o que é? Qual o seu impacto nas pessoas e organizações?
Etiquetas:
organizations,
social software
sábado, 8 de setembro de 2007
Hi5 é a rede social mais visitada pelos portugueses
Estatísticas das redes sociais em Portugal
"Durante o primeiro semestre deste ano, 77,6 por cento dos internautas com mais de três anos, residentes em Portugal Continental, acederam a redes sociais online, o que corresponde a 2,3 milhões de utilizadores, mostram os dados da Marktest.
No total, foram vistas mais de mil milhões de páginas em comunidades virtuais entre Janeiro e Junho, com cada internauta a ver, em média, 465 páginas. O tempo despendido nestes sites, por utilizador, foi de 3 horas e 14 minutos, o que perfaz um total de 7,5 milhões de horas ao longo do semestre.
Tanto homens como mulheres apresentam comportamentos semelhantes neste campo. Porém, a diferença assenta no horário escolhido para visitar estes espaços virtuais. As mulheres lideram as visitas entre as 11 horas e as 23 horas, enquanto que os homens apresentam uma taxa de acesso superior a partir dessa hora e durante a madrugada.
O Hi5 é o site que atrai mais visitantes liderando a tabela com perto de 2,02 milhões utilizadores únicos ao longo do primeiro semestre. Os internautas nacionais acederam a 673 milhões de páginas,dedicando-lhes 4,9 milhões de horas.
O Spaces.msn.com foi o segundo classificado em utilizadores únicos, com 993 mil utilizadores, e o MySpace terceiro, com 571 mil.
No que toca ao número de páginas visitadas o destaque foi para o site Pt.netlog.com (124 milhões), a terceira posição foi assegurada pelo orkut.com, que registou 110 milhões de páginas visualizadas.
Por seu turno, o segundo lugar em tempo dedicado pertenceu igualmente ao Pt.netlog.com, que obteve 737 mil horas em visualizações. O fotolog.com ficou em terceiro nesta categoria com cerca de 628 mil horas de navegação".
2007-07-18 17:01:00
In: http://tek.sapo.pt/4Q0/758352.html
Etiquetas:
estatísticas,
Fotolog,
Hi5,
MySpace,
Netlog,
social-networking
sábado, 30 de junho de 2007
"The rise of social software" by Michele Tepper
"In this age of tech industry retrenchment and reorganization, and the busting of DotCom dreams, it's surprising to learn that one area of Web software development—now known as "social software"—is more vibrant and active than ever.
Social software refers to various, loosely connected types of applications that allow individuals to communicate with one another, and to track discussions across the Web as they happen.
Many forms of social software are already old news for experienced technology users; bulletin boards, instant messaging, online role-playing games, and even the collaborative editing tools built into most word processing software all qualify.
But there are a whole host of new tools for discussion and collaboration, many of them in some way tied to the rise of the Weblog (or "blog").
New content syndication and aggregation tools, collaborative virtual workspaces, and collaborative editing tools, among others, are becoming popular, and social software is maturing so quickly that keeping up with it could be a full-time job in itself.
What's more, social software, especially the popular Weblog (or "blog") publishing tools, is gaining notice by the larger players on the Web.
Google recently purchased Pyra, creator of the popular Weblog tool Blogger, and added "Blog This!" as an option on its Google Toolbar.
AOL has announced that it will launch its own Weblog tool for its more than thirty million subscribers this summer.
Soon blogs—perhaps the first native publishing format for the Web—may become one of the most important prisms through which we understand the online world, since they and their relatives in collaboration and group discussion tools may become our primary way of interacting with one another online".
in Michele Tepper "The rise of social software", in netWorker
Volume 7, Number 3 (2003), Pages 18-23.http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/940830.940831
Social software refers to various, loosely connected types of applications that allow individuals to communicate with one another, and to track discussions across the Web as they happen.
Many forms of social software are already old news for experienced technology users; bulletin boards, instant messaging, online role-playing games, and even the collaborative editing tools built into most word processing software all qualify.
But there are a whole host of new tools for discussion and collaboration, many of them in some way tied to the rise of the Weblog (or "blog").
New content syndication and aggregation tools, collaborative virtual workspaces, and collaborative editing tools, among others, are becoming popular, and social software is maturing so quickly that keeping up with it could be a full-time job in itself.
What's more, social software, especially the popular Weblog (or "blog") publishing tools, is gaining notice by the larger players on the Web.
Google recently purchased Pyra, creator of the popular Weblog tool Blogger, and added "Blog This!" as an option on its Google Toolbar.
AOL has announced that it will launch its own Weblog tool for its more than thirty million subscribers this summer.
Soon blogs—perhaps the first native publishing format for the Web—may become one of the most important prisms through which we understand the online world, since they and their relatives in collaboration and group discussion tools may become our primary way of interacting with one another online".
in Michele Tepper "The rise of social software", in netWorker
Volume 7, Number 3 (2003), Pages 18-23.
Etiquetas:
Michele Tepper,
netWorker,
social software
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