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How Are People Tweeting?

by Brian Solis on February 27, 2009

by Brian Solis via PR 2.0


Source

HubSpot released the latest market data that reveals which tools and services people are flocking to when communicating on Twitter.

According to the research, most people interact on Twitter using Twitter.com from their browser of choice – almost half of all users in fact. Note to hubspot, would love to see that data broken out by browser.

Second, and it’s a distant second, people are interacting on Twitter using downloaded or web-based desktop apps, which provide additional functionality beyond the basic services provided on Twitter.com. Interestingly, mobile shows a strong placement in third, just behind desktop. As mobile applications on the iPhone, BlackBerry, Android, and Palm evolve, this number will continue to swell as they rival their desktop counterparts.

Twitter Interface Type – Percentage

Web – 48.1%
Desktop – 21.8%
Mobile – 17.9%
Aggregation / Automation – 11.7%
Pictures – 0.5%

HubSpot also reviewed the top applications in the Twitterverse. No surprise, the Web continues as the dominant source for Tweets, again representing almost half of all usage. What is surprising however, is the chasm of market share between the Web and the top Twitter apps. TwitterFeed and TweetDeck follow in a distant second and third place at 9.2% and 7.3% respectively. HubSpot found that a collective of over 600 apps combine for a total of 14.5%. I would love to see the list of those apps independt of this study.

Top Twitter Interfaces Percentage

Web – 46.5%
twitterfeed – 9.2%
TweetDeck – 7.3%
txt – 4.6%
twitterrific – 4.3%
twhirl – 4.0%
TwitterFox – 4.0%
Tween – 2.0%
TwitterBerry – 1.9%
TwitterFon – 1.8%
Over 600 Others – 14.5%

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Who are the Most Influential Twitterers?

by Brian Solis on February 1, 2009

by Brian Solis

Forbes recently ran its latest report on the most influential Twitterers, by the numbers.

According to the study, Guy Kawasaki holds the number 1 spot. His advice? ” Forget the “what are you doing?” question. Readers would rather hear news about layoffs at Microsoft than the length of the line at Starbucks.

Here’s the breakdown:

#1 Guy Kawasaki

#2 Robert Scoble

#3 Jason Calacanis

#4 Michael Arrington

#5 Kevin Rose

#6 Pete Cashmore

#7 Darren Rowse

#8 Leo Laporte

#9 Stephen Fry

#10 Will Wheaton

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Top 10 Twitter Apps

by Brian Solis on December 22, 2008

by Brian Solis

While I was updating my post, “Twitter Tools for Community and Communications Professionals,” I stumbled across a couple of interesting graphs that visualize the top applications for Twitter.

You’ll notice that the Web accounts for almost half of all Twitter interaction and that TwitterFeed represents a strong second position. But that’s where the similarities between the two graphs end, and interesting differences arise.

TweetScan:

Stats by Funkatron.com:

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Hottest Gadgets of 2008

by Brian Solis on December 16, 2008

by Brian Solis

Originally published on Intel’s InsideScoop blog. Disclosure, I’m an Intel Insider.

With CES right around the corner, I wanted to take a moment to spotlight some of the hottest gadgets to debut in 2008 – especially before we look forward to the most anticipated products set to hit the streets in 2009.

2008 was an almost overwhelming year rich with advancements and innovation that practically warrants a top 100 list to do it justice. However, I’ll focus on the products that specifically had a direct or indirect impact on my day-to-day workflow, personal entertainment, and also those few products that are currently sitting on my wish list.

Without further ado, let’s just jump right in. Listed in no particular order:

Jawbone

Jawbone’s second-generation Bluetooth headset absolutely rocks for me. I upgraded from the bigger, bulkier first generation model the very day the new unit arrived in stores. It lives up to its promise, providing a personal NoiseAssassin (TM) to kill surrounding noise allowing you and the personal on the other end of the line to speak and hear clearly.


Credit: Brian Solis

Flip MinoHD

The Flip camera line emerged practically out of nowhere to create a market for easily capturing high quality, Web-ready video and sharing it through email or YouTube, MySpace, and AOL. The new Flip MinoHD adds high definition video to the mix, allowing just about anyone to shoot and share HD video, taking advantage of YouTube’s new HD support.

Apple TV with Boxee

Apple TV is not new, but the ability to integrate (read: hack) a new DRM-free media dashboard and entertainment social network called Boxee transforms the Apple TV into a full-blown library and player for all of your movies and music, even for those not purchased through iTunes. It provides support for almost every format so that you can enjoy all of your content in one box.

Blackberry Storm

Dubbed as the first real threat to the iPhone, the sleek and elegant Blackberry Storm, stormed the market recently. It’s the first touchscreen Blackberry available, and while it’s unique to those considering a Blackberry product, and as, will do very well with consumers, I’m not quite sure it’s a threat to the iPhone. Perhaps it’s the iPhone for the Windows-centric workforce.

MediaGate 450HD

The Apple TV for the rest of us. The MediaGate connects directly to your HD TV via HDMI and provides a wireless connection to seamlessly stream or transfer media files directly from you main PC. Like the Apple TV with Boxee, The MediaGate 450HD system offers a visual dashboard for you to manage and enjoy your libraries of movies, pictures, videos, and music through your TV.

OPPO

Forget the debate over Blu Ray and HD DVD, most of us have collected dozens, if not hundreds of standard definition videos over the years. The OPPO DV-983H 1080p is an up-converting DVD player with ABT and 7.1CH Audio that transforms standard DVDs into HD-quality, breathing new life into your existing movie investment.

Zink

I was introduced to Zink at a past DEMO. Zink, which stands for Zero Ink, offers a printing solution for digital photographers to print pictures without ink cartridges.

At the heart of the ZINK Technology is the patented ZINK Paper, an advanced composite material with cyan, yellow, and magenta dye crystals embedded inside, and a protective polymer overcoat layer outside. The crystals are colorless before printing, so ZINK Paper looks like regular white photo paper. Heat from a ZINK-enabled device activates the crystals, forming all the colors of the rainbow.

Wii Fit

Wii is still one of the hottest products of 2008 and also one of this season’s hottest gifts. It’s a combination of fitness and fun in one, balance and pressure sensitive controller board. It’s not only for exercise and yoga, it can also be used for any game where your stature and agility are instrumental in navigating through the experience.

Livescribe

Also previewed at DEMO, Livescribe is one of the most sophisticated and natural solutions on the market today. Livescribe is a paper-based computing platform that turns plain paper into a computer screen and bridges paper and digital. The solution features the Smartpen, a Montblanc-size computer with advanced processing power, audio/visual feedback, and memory for handwriting capture, audio recording, and applications. The complementary Dot Paper features Dot Positioning System (DPS), technology, enabling interactive, “live” documents using plain paper printed with micro-dots.

Livescribe’s first key application is “Paper Replay.” When taking notes during a discussion or lecture, the smartpen records the conversation and digitizes the handwriting, automatically synching the ink and audio. By later tapping the ink, the smartpen replays the conversation from the exact moment the note was written. Notes and audio can also be uploaded to a PC where they can be replayed, saved, searched and sent. Additional applications will be available for download from www.livescribe.com.


Credit: Brian Solis

Tesla

Zero to 60 in under 4 seconds with a top speed of 125 mph and a redline of 14,000 RPM, this all electric sports car is redefining the automotive industry. With a price tag of $109,000 and a waiting list consisting of an A-list from Hollywood and the tech industry, Tesla has become Silicon Valley’s media darling by offering an eco-friendly vehicle that can travel up to 244 miles per charge. This car has been on my wish list since I attended the grand opening of the dealership in Menlo Park. you’ll be pleased to know that this sleek roadster will only cost you pennies per mile.


Credit: Brian Solis

Apple 3G iPhone

For the second year in a row, I joined Robert Scoble as we ventured to the Apple store in San Francisco to witness the debut of the new iPhone, well, and to also purchase a few. The iPhone 3G delivered on the promise to offer an all inclusive personal entertainment and productivity experience now supported by mobile broadband connectivity. The new phone also marked the debut of the iPhone App Store, which is further fueling the frenzy by providing a mobile marketplace for application developers and consumers. Apple claims that the App Store has served more than 300,000,000 downloads to date. The iPhone has done nothing short of completely reinvent the user experience, inspiring almost every consumer electronics company to rethink product designs, interfaces, and usability.


Photo Credit: Brian Solis

Canon EOS 5D Mark II

As a photographer, this has been on my list well before its official public release. And, now that it’s finally available and shipping, I’m forced to continue my wait until production can meet the phenomenal demand.

Canon’s update to its full frame EOS 5D features a stunning 21.1-megapixel full-frame CMOS sensor with DIGIC 4 Image Processor, a vast ISO Range of 100-6400 (expandable to ISO L: 50, H1: 12800 and H2: 25600), plus EOS technologies like Auto Lighting Optimizer and Peripheral Illumination Correction. Perhaps most notably, it features full HD video recording at 30 fps. View sample videos here: http://tinyurl.com/5zsljo.

The 5d Mark II can also shoot up to 3.9 fps, offers 9 AF points plus 6 AF assist points, a new 98% coverage viewfinder, and a 3.0-inch Clear View LCD (920,000 dots/VGA).

UPDATE: My 5D Mark II arrived today. After shooting the first picture and HD movie, the auto focus on my 35mm prime Canon L series lens gave out. Hmmm. The picture and the video are incredible however.

Intel Atom Processor
Yes, while I’m an Intel Insider, I’m almost positive that Intel’s new Atom Processor will make many “Best Of” lists for 2008. It’s yet another breakthrough, which serves as a catalyst for innovation in mobile computing, social networking, and collaboration.

The Atom is Intel’s smallest and lowest power processor processor to date and powers the latest Mobile Internet Devices as well as the rapidly emerging category of netbooks and nettops.

Designed from the ground up, 45nm Intel Atom processors integrate an astounding 47 million transistors on a single chip measuring less than 26mm, making them Intel’s smallest and lowest power processors to date.

Looking forward to seeing you at CES 2009 in Las Vegas along with the rest of the Intel Insiders! (Note:  See Intel Insider stories featured on the Consumer Electronics Insider site.

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Silicon Valley PRSA Hosts Media Predicts 2009

by Brian Solis on December 4, 2008

by Brian Solis

The Silicon Valley PRSA chapter hosted its annual Media Predicts event at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View. Industry trendsetters, chroniclers and luminaries shared their predictions for trends, issues and technologies for 2009.

Media Predicts is literally a black tie affair that attracted PR professionals from every major agency and tech company in Silicon Valley.

Sam Whitmore of Sam Whitmore’s Media Survey emceed the evening and Ann Windbladt of Hummer Winblad Venture Partners served as the moderator.

The panel consisted of tech media heavyweights:

Elise Ackerman, Technology Reporter, San Jose Mercury News
Michael Arrington, TechCrunch
John Markoff, Senior Writer, The New York Times
Mark Veverka, West Coast Editor & Columnist, Barron’s
Richard Waters, West Coast Editor, Financial Times

The discussion ranged from netbooks to Web 2.0 to Google and Facebook to Microsoft and Yahoo and everything in between. The witty banter seemed to lead us all over the place, but overall, it still fun and entertaining.

The panel invited us to gaze into their respective crystal balls for a moment, but for the most part, we dissected and analyzed the successes and epic failures of 2008.

Here are some of the highlights;

Some viewed the Obama campaign as the killer app of 2008, while others were ready to move beyond “Web 2.0.”

Michael Arrington, for example, scrubbed Web 2.0 from TechCrunch. When asked by Ann what his definition of Web 2.0 is, Arrington responded, “Web 2.0 was a renaissance from a nuclear winter – the last recession. We’re all about technology.”

Richard Waters defined Web 2.0 as ultra-low cost publishing with a bit of interactive tools.

Joh Markoff described it as open interfaces and open tools that plug services together in a Lego-like function.

The conversation promptly shifted from open to closed systems.

Arrington characterized a trend that closed could be the new open. He highlighted two successful companies that are based on closed systems, Apple and Facebook. In 2009, he’s looking forward to the competition between Android, iPhone and other smart phones.

Markoff countered, claiming that Apple is not closed. “If you count the lines of code in the Mac OS, 1/2 are open source,” he exclaimed.

Arrington pointed to Microsoft in its prime. “What if Microsoft approved all apps for the Windows OS before they were allowed to sell to the public,” he asked.

Richard Waters jumped in, “Apple is a closed system and closed platform,” he stated.

Ann introduced Gartner’s Top 10 Strategic Technologies for 2009:

  • Virtualization
  • Cloud Computing
  • Servers
  • Web-Oriented Architectures
  • Enterprise Mashups
  • Specialized Systems
  • Social Software and Social Networks
  • Unified Communications
  • Business Intelligence
  • Green IT

In response to the list, Arrington revealed that he’s fascinated by the cloud computing efforts that are targeted at enterprise and consumers. However, he cautioned against the over enthusiasm of 2009 trends in the enterprise as it may well be the year of tremendous IT cuts in resources and budget.

Richard Waters refererred to Chris Anderson’s next book, “FREE.” In 2009, he believes that free is no longer going to be a good business model to support. “Cheap, on the otherhand is a great business model,” he believes.

I’ll let the pictures tell the rest of the story…

Ann Winblad, John Markoff

Michael Arrington, TechCrunch

Mark Veverka, Barron’s

John Markoff

Elise Ackerman, San Jose Mercury News

Sam Whitmore

For more pictures from the Media Predicts 2009 event, please visit my album on flickr.

Special thanks to DNA13 for the invitation to join them at the event.

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