More than one-quarter (26.7%) of the French online population visit a blog at least once a month.
Gossip, Politicking, Rule Blogosphere
Though bloggers like to talk about themselves the most, blog readers seem to have very specific interests in other things. This week’s Pew report said that 95% of bloggers polled get their news online. Hitwise adds to that by revealing that politics, celebrities, and gadgets dominate sought-after subject matter.
Blogosphere Returning to Old Media Ways?
I was chatting on Skype with Pete Cashmore last week and I was glad that he came to the same conclusion I have about the current state of the blogosphere.
Seeds Of An Associated Blogosphere
A WiFi-connected “blogger bus” was parked outside E3, the Mecca of gaming in L.A., readied with plasma TVs and leather couches, so the Xbox faithful could hammer out the news and views to make up the canonical texts of the gaming “way of life.”
The Multilingual Blogosphere
Everyone knows that the blogosphere continues to grow, still doubling in size every six months or so, maintaining a consistent three-year growth trend.
The Blogosphere is Growing…
…but is it just yardstick measurement?
Anything Goes in the Blogosphere
It’s a great place, the blogosphere. Anyone with an opinion about anything can articulate it. And anyone does precisely that, including me.
Read the Freakin’ Blogosphere
Change or die. We hear the phrase all the time. In fact we hear the expression so often that it’s become a drumbeat cliche. Still the change or die mantra is the anthem of the Internet age, like it or not.
Nielsen Snags Blogosphere Data Monopoly
By acquiring a majority stake in Intelliseek (which publishes BlogPulse), plugging that data into Buzzmetrics, and dubbing it Nielsen Buzzmetrics, Nielsen parent VNU effectively cornered the market on blog data.
Gaining Street Cred In The Blogosphere
The blogosphere’s a scary place for corporate America. It’s unruly. It’s wild. But one thing’s for sure, it can’t be ignored, and big companies are going to have to dismount from their high horses and get to street level.