Posts Tagged ‘scoble’
Site back up
Posted by Yuvi in announcement on January 15th, 2009
Sorry for the downtime folks, a single Retweet from Scoble crashed it. He still hasn’t answered my questions though
(Guess he is too busy tracking the Steve Jobs story)
Scoble’s Google Reader Linkblog Leaderboard and Trends
Posted by Yuvi in Google Reader, Leaderboards on January 15th, 2009
Scoble, the guy who originally made the concept of Google Reader Shared Items as a “Link Blog” famous. He was also the first person to be featured on Statbot (back when it was hosted on my personal blog), and has been extremely helpful to me in ways even he might not have imagined
Anyway, here is the leaderboard of his last 5,000 shares on Google Reader:
Notes
- Only four individual blogs up there (LG, Thomas Hawk, Dave Winer and Scoble himself). Much lower than the one for Louis Gray, but expected for Scoble.
- I could count four firehose feeds there (Planet Interwingly, ZDNet Blogs, MSDN Blogs & Hacker News) which pretty much tons of blogs/feeds packed into one. How the hell does he read them? Borg technology?
- That weird looking url at spot 6, as most of you would have guessed, is his Ego Search feed on Google Blogsearch. I wonder how long back he had switched from Technorati to Google Blog Search?
- And that other weird looking url at spot 14 is the combined feed of all the GigaOM network blogs. Wonder why it isn’t provided by GigaOM itself?
- Both Giz and Engadget are present, Engadget has almost twice as many shares as Gizmodo.
- Hacker News beats Digg (which is at spot 36, with 25 shares).
- The top four are all in some way or the other related to Web 2.0 and startups – and combined together contribute to more than 13.5 % of his feed.
And to compare trends, here’s the leaderboard for the last 10,000 shares on Google Reader:
Notes
- First thing to note is that the Ego Search has jumped up in the bigger list, meaning that either (i) People stopped writing much about Scoble or (ii) He stopped caring.
- There is still a gap between Engadget and Gizmodo, though not as pronounced. Must get real hard, looking at all that tech porn
- All those firehose feeds were still there, and there were more shares from them than now. Infact, two firehoses are present in the 10,000 shares list but missing in the 5,000 shares list - Digg and Sun Blogs.
- Note that Digg beats Hacker News here. Reddit is way down at spot 72 with 26 shares (out of 10,000)
- Quite a few shares from when he was still at the now-defunct PodTech.
Questions for Scoble:
Now, I have a few questions to ask Scoble:
- Why the hell is FastCompany missing from both the lists? I found a total of just 9 shares from all the fastcompany.com websites combined. WTF? (Or am I totally missing something here?)
- Why Google Blog Search instead of Technorati?
- Why the firehose feeds instead of subscribing individually? (I once tried subscribing to the MSDN Blogs firehose feed. Lasted all of 2 hours before unsubscribing)
- If the link blog is pinned as a place to share quality links/posts, and it’s so dominated by magazi-blogs, does that mean that Indie bloggers are not producing great content? Or content in great-enough numbers? (Note that this is not as bad for the Indie guys as it sounds – I’ll post graphs tomorrow showing that many blogs contribute a small number of posts, while a few blogs contribute a large number of posts. That’s power law – All I’m asking is why is that so. Why aren’t the few blogs that contribute a large number of posts written by single persons, but are basically magazines?)
- Am I sane?
Get the Raw Data from Zoho
And if you want to have a look yourself, you can get the entire list (not just the top 25) from this Zoho Spreadsheet (html version). I will probably upload spreadsheets for every leaderboard I do from now on
Twitter Wordle: Robert Scoble
Needs no introduction, I guess. Robert Scoble, rumored to be a nascent version of the borg with a drone dedicated to every site.
Here’s the wordle of his last 3000 tweets:
“Just” and “now” make an appearance (as they seem to be doing in almost every major web 2.0ish person’s tweets), and then there’s the meta stuff - “Twitter” and “FriendFeed”. “People”, “Video”, and “going” are pretty big too, so lots of tweets about people he’s going to interview
China gets a visible mention due to his longish trip there (and since I’m considering only the last 3000 tweets). “See”, “Obama”, “right”, “cool”, “like”, “love”, “Great”, “New”, “blog”, “iPhone”, “Nokia” also get mentioned.
And no, don’t worry – The Statbot is not becoming Wordle-only
Stay tuned for more stuff
Statbot visits Scoble at Twitter
Starting off The Statbot, I analysed Robert Scoble’s twitter stream. Scoble never lets you down, especially when it comes to providing data: He’s on twitter, friendfeed, flickr, qik, a blog and god-knows-how-many-other-services. I will be analysing the rest of his “Online Life”, with posts about them on regular intervals, starting now with his Twitter Stream.
Size
The dataset used consists of 10,598 tweets from http://twitter.com/scobleizer, spanning 523 days (till April 27th 2008, when this was written), with 175,543 words, 1,026,899 chars, and 1,095,406 keystrokes! Means more than a million keypresses had been sacrificed by Scoble for twitter. These came at an average of 20 tweet per day (explained below), 16.5 words per tweet, 97 chars per tweet and 103 keystrokes per tweet. Still, just about half as many chars as found on his Wordpress blog when I last profiled it more than a year ago.
Tweeting Frequency
Here’s the chart showing the No. of Tweets per day:

For almost four months after starting the account on November 20th, it remained dormant: Until the end of February, there were only 114 tweets, at a dismal average of 1.1 tweet a day. There’s another slow period during May-Jul 2007, and another one between Mid Oct-Dec 07. In short, he’s totally erratic – see the huge spikes followed by the flat and low worms. He is going ballistic in 2008 though – He has 4693, or 44% of his tweets, in 2008, at an average of 40 per day, which is double his overall average
Clients Used

About half the tweets come from the web, and about a third come in via IM. Twitterific is the most used Desktop Client (Mac only. Ugh). Only 3 SMS Messages. He tried twhirl, iTweet and Snitter for a bit, but probably he doesn’t like them. My theory is that he likes IM because you are not limited to just 20 tweets per minute. Being restricted to 20 tweets per minute will make you lose a lot of tweets, especially when you follow 21k people. I find twhirl dropping many tweets, and I follow only 1.5k people. I wonder how he managed with the Web though (most of his recent tweets are via IM).
Replies
Of those 10,598 tweets, 6,831 or approximately 64% are replies to someone else.

Extremely chatty, and not too many original thoughts
But I fancy I’ll find someone chattier sooner than later
Those 6,831 replies are to 2,260 people, at an average of 3 replies per person. Here’s the top 10:
| Rank | User | Replies |
| 1 | spin |
150 |
| 2 | loiclemeur |
142 |
| 3 | davewiner |
127 |
| 4 | techcrunch |
99 |
| 5 | prokofy |
76 |
| 6 | chrispirillo |
59 |
| 7 | duncanriley |
51 |
| 8 | gapingvoid |
46 |
| 9 | jasoncalacanis |
46 |
| 10 | steverubel |
41 |
I’ve never heard of spin before, neither of prokofy. I’m not too twitter-literate
Also of note is that Dave Winer is No.3, and has blocked Scobleizer…
Also, the replies are pretty Long Tailish – 36% of the replies are to the top 100, while 64% are to the bottom 2160.

That’s good, but here’s another chart:

Only about 25% of his followers get at least one @ reply. Conversationalist? Or maybe those followers don’t @ to him? I don’t know, because there is no data available (yet) on the number of @scobleizers in the twittersphere.
Here’s another pretty interesting chart:

There’s a 55% chance that you won’t get more than one reply from him (if you get a reply at all), and a staggering 89% chance you won’t get more than 5 replies. Couple this with the fact that 64% of his tweets are replies. His attention is nowhere near “undivided”
Trivia
Here comes the fun part

Mondays are the most active, followed closely by Sundays. I can understand Sundays, but Mondays? Maybe because Twittering is now part of his Day Job?
Also, he seems to be twittering at all odd hours…

I had quite a bit of trouble with this one, due to Time Zone differences. In the end, I just converted everything to PST, since that’s where Scoble is most of the time anyway.
As you can see, tweeting gets going at around 7 PM and goes on till 12 AM, and slowly dies down at 1 AM. Usually sleeps from 2 AM to 7 AM, and Twittering picks up again after 9AM.
Also, this very colorful chart (along with all the other charts here), is made possible because Steve Clayton sent me a copy of the awesome Office ‘07 (along with a couple of signed cards and a Blue Monster Tee). Thanks!
The End
I’m working on similar stats posts for other folks, and here’s the shortlist: Jason Calacanis, Chris Brogan, Jim Long, C.C Chapman, Karoli, Guy Kawasaki, Justine(simply because I like her avatar;)), Dave Winer, Hugh MacLeod and anyone else you may nominate in the comments. Also, I’ve got some very cool stuff coming down the pipe(such as an analysis of the Techmeme Leaderboard, creation of a Flickr Leaderboard, TechCrunch analysis, an Apple Weblogs showdown, etc), so don’t forget to subscribe to the RSS feed if you found this interesting
Update: Preview
Here’s a very small preview of what’s coming up next:

Notice which worm is on top? (ducks, and runs)
