AI
Today, AI – artificial intelligence, is back in fashion and getting serious attention; http://tr.im/mf0S
Today, AI – artificial intelligence, is back in fashion and getting serious attention; http://tr.im/mf0S
Aarkstore: Online ad spend is nearing that spent on television commercials; http://tr.im/mf05
Bitkom: 42 Prozent der Bundesbürger haben im vergangenen Jahr im Internet eingekauft; http://tr.im/meY0
Wolfram: “Let’s search for a concept, not a specific answer for a question that we actually have”; http://tr.im/meWW
Sider: How important will avatars become in the role of IM and communities? Great slides from 2007; http://tr.im/lXwQ
Mashable arranged 35+ examples of corporate social media in action: a precious abridgement; http://tr.im/lXvY
ComScore: Twitter outnumbered Digg, NYT, LinkedIn in April, reaching 32 million unique visitors; http://tr.im/lXou
Google Suggest goes result pages, personalizing, and adds sponsored links to its suggestions; http://tr.im/lXnp
20 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute, that’s nearly a day worth of footage; http://tr.im/lXjp
http://TwtBizCard.com (once again by TwtApps) lets you exchange business cards on Twitter; http://tr.im/lQFc
YouTube: “In mid-2007, six hours of video were uploaded to YouTube every minute. Then it grew to eight hours per minute, then 10, then 13. In January of this year, it became 15 hours of video uploaded every minute, the equivalent of Hollywood releasing over 86,000 new full-length movies into theaters each week. – Now, 20 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute, and it is a testament to the fact that you’ve made YouTube your online video home. We couldn’t have built this site without your commitment to sharing your thoughts, experiences, and creativity with each other.”
TC: “Time Magazine recently called YouTube one of the biggest tech failures of the past decade, which was hilarious. Hilarious in that the site is by far and away the most popular site for video on the web, and has revolutionized the way we view videos, period. … It’s true that YouTube is not making Google any money, but when a site has this much dominance over a market, one way or another, there will be a way to effectively monetize it. … Meanwhile, YouTube continues to become a bigger part of Google’s larger social picture. Today, the service added a way to immediately record a video response to a video after you watch it.”
Mashable: “So while YouTube’s outwardly celebrating that we’re dumping 20 hours of video on their servers every minute, we think they should count their blessings with a little more realism since, based on previous patterns, this number, along with bandwidth costs, will only continue to rise.“