Blogue d'actualite du blogue et d'ailleurs sur le Web... Blogue mémoire en ligne depuis 2003... Précurseur en son genre, ce "blogue de liens" existe depuis la nuit des temps (en âge blogosphèrique). À sa naissance il participa aux grandes lignes de l'infernale blogosphère, puis des remous virtuels le firent tanguer sans arriver à le faire sombrer. Il se retrouva en ces eaux paisibles d'où il vogue désormais sans peine ni tracas...

22 mai 2003

@ Lie et lis (nouvelle rubrique de mediaTIC)
Nouvelle rubrique dans mediaTIC, quelques liens touffus quotidiens sans commentaires en long, en large et en travers pour s'y retrouver un petit peu dans l'actualité qui me paraît intéressante (c'est très égocentrique, ça :-) de la blogosphère :
@ The blog clog myth : "The row over whether webloggers are distorting Google search results is a storm in a teacup, writes Neil McIntosh",
@ Dynamics of a Blogosphere Story : "Perhaps the last conclusions we came to in this study is that blogs cannot be read in isolation from each other. Blog stories are understood and appreciated in aggregate and not in isolation. On the other hand, mainstream media stories tend to be read in isolation rather than read and compared.",
@ Blogumentary Preview Trailer v1.0 : "You know you want it! Rebecca Blood, Matt Haughey, Meg Hourihan, Jason Kottke, Anil Dash, Jeff Jarvis, David Weinberger, and all those funny people on the street who don't know what a blog is. And a few who do. It's all here in my first crack at a trailer for Blogumentary, which I was up all night editing and FedEx'd to Vienna for the blogtalk conference."
@ Fun Things To Do With Words : "Researcher Jon Kleinberg of Cornell University tapped into this skill when he created a tool that analyzes "word burstiness." It is similar to latent semantic analysis in that it detects textual patterns, but it is designed to look specifically at semantic changes chronologically. The software sees a document archive as a narrative?at each point in the story, certain words will suddenly become popular as other words lose favor. Borrowing language from the study of computer-network traffic, Kleinberg calls these words "bursty." For months or years they lie dormant, then suddenly burst into the common vocabulary...".

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