Remove Mobile Remove Social Networking Remove Social News Remove Sports
article thumbnail

Citizen Journalism: Who is a Journalist Today?

Proactive Report

Almost half of all Americans (47%) now get some form of local news on a mobile device. 3 out of 5 tablet owners consume news on their tablets and many news publications have created a tablet app. Opportunities to act as a citizen journalist abound.

Journal 99
article thumbnail

Fifteen Years of Online Social Interactions

Techipedia: Tamar Weinberg

but I was an early adopter of social networks from when I first opened my 3.5″ On the other hand, my first ever interaction on AOL was with someone who was separated from my social network by only one degree. Twitter is the new chat room, but IRC still remains a popular choice behind services like Ustream and Y!

MySpace 101
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Best Internet Marketing Posts of 2011

Techipedia: Tamar Weinberg

8 Tips for Blogger Outreach : Networking is important, but how do you reach the influencers you’re looking for? Don’t Abuse Social Network Pings : Social media gives you ways to connect with people you know easily, but there are certain etiquette rules to take into consideration. Summary: network (the verb).

Marketing 264
article thumbnail

Best Internet Marketing Posts of 2010

Techipedia: Tamar Weinberg

Local/Mobile Search. 10 Ways for Small Businesses to Use LinkedIn (LinkedIn Blog): LinkedIn is still a very viable social network, so businesses of all sizes need to leverage it. Segmenting Social Traffic in Google Analytics (SEOmoz): Ever want to know how you can tweak Google Analytics to get some deeper data on social traffic?

Marketing 279
article thumbnail

The 2011 #Nifty50 Top Twitter Men Reprise

Webbiquity SMM

Social Networking: Like Falling In Love. Penenberg’s ( @Penenberg ) Fast Company article: “Social Networking Affects Brains Like Falling in Love” examines research by neuroeconomist Paul Zak that suggests social networking triggers the release of the generosity-trust chemical in our brains: Oxytocin (known as the cuddle chemical).

Twitter 196