Jeremy Zilar, the NY Times Blog specialist, stopped by Istanbul

Jeremy with from L-R: Erkan, Salih Memecan, Deniz Ergürel, Hıdır Geviş, Rana Şenol Invited by Media Association, Jeremy Zilar, NY Times blog specialist, gave two speeches on Tuesday. … A review in Turkish here. A summary of this talk in Turkish again here. I have learned that 23% blog traffic goes to the home page … Read more

şöyle bir etkinlik var: “Türkiyeli Blogcular Buluşması

Özellikle haber ağırlıklı blogların işleneceği bir etkinlik. Ben de konuşmacılar arasındayım…

A journalism roundup: iPad 2 for journalists, “Digital feudalism etc…

The iPad 2 brings better content creation for journalists from Editors Weblog – all postings by Ashley Stepanek There is much hullabaloo in the media about the iPad 2, following a significant period of speculation about new features. We now know that, yes, it is thinner and lighter by way of 0.34-inches deep and 1.33 … Read more

“Electronic Literature Collection” and more…

Electronic Literature Collection, Vol. 2 from Transliteracy Research Group by Christine Wilks   The Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 2, recently launched on the web, is an anthology of works by an international group of authors “that pushes through the boundaries of literary forms, creating new kinds of experiences for interacting readers.” Published by the Electronic … Read more

Anthro blogs collaborating for love letters for Anthropology :)

Anthropology Love Letters from Neuroanthropology by daniel.lende On Valentine?s Day, Rex at Savage Minds called for love letters to anthropology. This idea is simple: in the next seven days, for a few thousand words, somewhere public on the Internet, write about why you like anthropology. Then we?ll make the guys at Neuroanthropology do a round … Read more

EFD Milyonuncu Ziyaret Partisi’ne davetlisiniz! #efdparty

Erkan’s Field Diary 2004 Haziran’ında başladı yayına. Çeşitli adreslerden sonra bu adreste yoluna devam etti. 2005 Haziran’ından beri Sitemeter sayacı ziyaretleri sayıyor. Sağ üst köşede sayacı görebilirsiniz. Aslında daha bir milyon olmadı ama 2-3 ay içinde olacak. Sevgili Ümit bu tarihte yapmaya ikna etti beni. Parti organizasyonunda Ümit Bektaş, Yıldız Asımoğlu ve Sevcan Çelik’in katkılarını … Read more

by the way, Wikileaks has a gift shop now…

  WikiLeaks Opens a Gift Shop [PICS] from Mashable! by Todd Wasserman Aiming to raise funds for both the controversial website and leader Julian Assange?s legal defense fund, WikiLeaks this month opened an online gift shop. 23/02/2011 – Five major newspapers debate Wikileaks in Madrid MADRID – Today the auditorium of the Reina Sofia museum … Read more

New PEW report: Global Publics Embrace Social Networking

Global Publics Embrace Social Networking Computer and Cell Phone Usage Up Around the World Another report: Generations 2010 by Kathryn Zickuhr Generation Y Likes Facebook More Than Television from All Facebook by Jackie Cohen If you have deja vu seeing statistics like these, join the club: Some 81 percent of affluent Generation Y adults logs … Read more

Lorenz’ sum of the AAA 2010 meeting: 6000 anthropologists, much tweeting, some blogging, no press coverage

New Orleans: 6000 anthropologists, much tweeting, some blogging, no press coverage from antropologi.info – anthropology in the news blog by Lorenz It has been one of the best attended conferences ever. More than 6000 anthropologists went to the 109th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Society (AAA) in New Orleans. But as usual, it?s hard … Read more

A major decision: Erkan’s Field Diary now accepts contributions in Turkish

…and there are some other decisions. See full post and comment: http://9gag.com/gag/28663 I, myself, will continue to post in English and the blog language will still be primarily English but guest authors/contributors can contribute in Turkish. In fact, Can Erol had already started doing that… And some will continue to write in English.. Initial reason … Read more

Chris Kelty?s thoughts on blogging in anthropology

Social Sciences and Human Decency Anthropologists have coaxed secrets from some of the most remote and vulnerable populations in existence. What do the scholars owe their subjects in return? more #AAA2010 FTW! from Savage Minds: Notes and Queries in Anthropology ? A Group Blog by Kerim This year was a breakout year for the use … Read more

Cyb-Roundup: Google’s new search index, COPPA,


http://www.behance.net/samael
found in  never trust a hippy

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Our new search index: Caffeine

from Google Webmaster Central Blog by Michael Wyszomierski
(Cross-posted on the Official Google Blog)
Today, we’re announcing the completion of a new web indexing system called Caffeine. Caffeine provides 50 percent fresher results for web searches than our last index, and it’s the largest collection of web content we’ve offered. Whether it’s a news story, a blog or a forum post, you can now find links to relevant content much sooner after it is published than was possible ever before.

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Berkman center presents: “A Tale of Two Blogospheres

A Tale of Two Blogospheres

from Berkman Center Newsfeed

The Berkman Center is pleased to announce the release of a new paper exploring U.S. political blogs:

A Tale of Two Blogospheres: Discursive Practices on the Left and the Right, by Yochai Benkler, Aaron Shaw, and Victoria Stodden

This paper compares the practices of discursive production and participation among top U.S. political blogs on the left, right, and center during the summer of 2008 and, based on qualitative coding of the top 155, finds evidence of an association between ideological affiliation and the technologies, institutions, and practices of participation across political blogs. Sites on the left adopt more participatory technical platforms; are comprised of significantly fewer sole-authored sites; include user blogs; maintain more fluid boundaries between secondary and primary content; include longer narrative and discussion posts; and (among the top half of the blogs in the papers’ sample) more often use blogs as platforms for mobilization as well as discursive production.

The variations observed between the left and right wings of the U.S. political blogosphere provide insights into how varied patterns of technological adoption and use within a single society may produce distinct effects on democracy and the public sphere. The study also suggests that the prevailing techniques of domain-based link analysis used to study the political blogosphere to date may have fundamental limitations.

To read the full abstract and download the paper, visit http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/publications/2010/Tale_Two_Blogospheres_Discursive_Practices_Left_Right

Also, The Nation has published a piece about the study, as well as an interview with Yochai Benkler.

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