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Tag: twitter trends

  • Naked eBay Seller Kicks Off #ebayyellowskaterdress Twitter Trend [Semi, But Hardly NSFW]

    Naked eBay Seller Kicks Off #ebayyellowskaterdress Twitter Trend [Semi, But Hardly NSFW]

    Apparently this was popular on reddit a while ago, but a woman who posted a picture of a dress with herself standing naked in the background also managed to spark a Twitter trend, and got the web buzzing. Sometimes that’s all it takes.

    According to the Huffington Post, the woman is from Oxfordshire, England, and accidentally uploaded the pic to eBay, despite going by the user name sugartit_2. Now, the picture is all over the web (including the Huffington Post and all over Twitter).

    You really can’t see much in the picture, despite the attention it has drawn. She’s barely off to the side, and kind of in the shadows, so it’s probably not as embarrassing as it could have been, though managing to make a Twitter Trend might make up for that, if in fact, this was an accident on “sugartit_2’s” part.

    Either way, Twitter seems to think it has been a good business move.

    The trend even drew the attention of comedian Andrew Dice Clay:

  • Twitter Adds Trends For 100 More Cities

    Twitter Adds Trends For 100 More Cities

    Twitter announced today that it has added Trends for 100 more cities around the world. Among them are Istanbul, Frankfurt, Guadalajara and Incheon. That puts the total number of locations at over 200.

    You can see the Trends for all the different locations by simply clicking “Change” in the Trends section.

    Twitter Change Trends

    “People around the world turn to Twitter to talk about a range of topics – from football to giving thanks to sharing information and resources during natural disasters and emergencies,” says Twitter search and relevance engineer Kostas Tsioutsiouliklis. “This is why Twitter uniquely captures the pulse of the planet, and the pulse of your city: by surfacing the topics that people care about.”

    Meanwhile, Google remains without a realtime search feature, forcing news-seekers looking for up-to-the-second updates to go elsewhere (like Twitter).

    Twitter says it plans on adding more locations for Trends.

  • New MIT Algorithm Predicts Twitter Trends Hours in Advance

    Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have announced a new algorithm they say is capable of predicting Twitter trends far in advance.

    The algorithm is claimed to predict with 95% accuracy the topics that will show up on Twitter’s trending topics list. It can make these predictions an average of an hour and a half before Twitter lists the topic as a trend, and can sometimes predict trends as much as four or five hours in advance.

    Devavrat Shah, associate professor in the electrical engineering and computer science department at MIT, and MIT graduate student Stanislav Nikolov will present the algorithm at the Interdisciplinary Workshop on Information and Decision in Social Networks in November.

    Shah stated that the algorithm is a nonparametric machine-learning algorithm, meaning it makes no assumptions about the shape of patterns. It compares changes over time in the number of tweets about a new topic to the changes over time seen in every sample in the training set. Also, training set samples with statistics similar to the new topic are more heavily weighted when determining a prediction. Shah compared it to voting, where each sample gets a vote, but some votes count more than others.

    This method is different from the standard approach to machine learning, where researchers create a model of the pattern whose specifics need to be inferred. In theory, the new approach could apply to any quantity that varies over time (including the stock market), given the right subset of training data.

    For Shah and Nikolov’s initial experiments, they used data from 200 Twitter topics that were listed as trends and 200 that were not. “The training sets are very small, but we still get strong results,” said Shah. In addition to the algorithm’s 95% prediction rate, it also had only a 4% false-positive rate.

    The accuracy of the system can increase with additional training sets, but the computing costs will also increase. However, Shah revealed that the algorithm has been designed to execute across separate machines, such as web servers. “It is perfectly suited to the modern computational framework,” said Shah.

    “It’s very creative to use the data itself to find out what trends look like,” said Ashish Goel, associate professor of management science at Stanford University and a member of Twitter’s technical advisory board. “It’s quite creative and quite timely and hopefully quite useful.

    “People go to social-media sites to find out what’s happening now. So in that sense, speeding up the process is something that is very useful.”

    (Image courtesy MIT)

  • Arkansas Razorbacks Football Looks To Twitter For Trend Help

    After the well-publicized Bobby Petrino debacle the Arkansas Razorbacks football team had to deal with, it’s understandable if the athletic department does whatever it can to improve the buzz surrounding the program, even if it means putting Twitter hashtags on the football field.

    The sad thing is, if Petrino had not screwed himself out of his head coaching position, the buzz surrounding the team going into the 2012/13 college football season was going to be very high, and while the team has the talent to warrant such positive outlooks, the previous head coach’s fall from grace took just about all of that goodwill. With that in mind, the University of Arkansas’ athletic department hopes a positive Twitter trend or two will help people move on.

    As pointed out by Dr. Saturday, Yahoo Sports’ college football blog, via Darren Rovell, at the upcoming spring game the hashtag “#GOHOGS” will be painted on the field:

    (image)

    The question is, will a potentially positive Twitter trend help the school/football program overcome the mess Bobby Petrino and Smilin’ Jessica Dorell left behind? Furthermore, what happens if the conversation surrounding the “#GOHOGS” hashtag descends into the “tear Pertino and Dorell down” hour? How can that be good for the program looking to move beyond such a mess?

    This, of course, is the risk you take when you look to the Twitter masses to improve an already-tarnished image. You have absolutely no control over the message once it gets out. As for the hashtag itself, some find the move dubious:

    @darrenrovell putting twitter hash tags on your football field (Ark, Miss St) shows you have no tradition in football #truth(image) 21 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    @darrenrovell AR on-field hashtag should be #ARNeedsNewCoach(image) 22 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Concerning the first tweet, don’t you just love how anytime someone offers an opinion about something sports-related, their observation somehow becomes the truth?

  • Et Tu, Twittere? The Internet Bewares(?) The Ides of March

    I love mid-March. At least where I live, it’s finally warm enough to bike to work in a t-shirt, and this morning I woke up to the sound of birds chirping in the trees outside my window. Lengthening days and our recent daylight savings spring forward even means I no longer spend my entire day without seeing the Sun. This is bad news for my 9-5 vampire friends, though.

    What I love most about this time of year is the veritable smorgasbord of pseudo-holidays that mid-March offers us. Yesterday we celebrated Pi[e] Day with our favorite circular desserts, while some people observed Steak and a BJ day — a sort of “Man’s Valentine’s Day” — with filets and fellatio. (I had burgers for dinner.) March Madness is upon basketball fans, Spring is just around the corner, and this Saturday is St. Patrick’s Day which–while a real holiday–is mostly celebrated by pseudo-Irish drunkards, so I’ll include it in the list.

    But today is March 15, Idus Martii, the Ides of March. It’s a day to reflect on betrayal, to worship Mars, to watch some Shakespeare, to beware things, or to repeat a phrase without a clue as to its meaning.

    Here’s a an abridged breakdown of the history of the Ides of March. From Wikipedia, reliable authority and source of all knowledge in the Universe:

      Ides comes from the Latin word “Idus” and means “half division” especially in relation to a month. … The Ides of March was a festive day dedicated to the god Mars and a military parade was usually held.

    May, July, and October also have ides on the 15th. Other months have ides on the 13th.

    The reason we still beware today, though, is that on this day in 44 A.D., Julius Caesar was betrayed and murdered by a backstabbing (literally) group of friends and and other co-conspirators. Old J.C. was stabbed 23 times, according to Plutarch, or if you’re into poetry, “three and thirty” times, says Shakespeare. This brings me to my next point: Don’t go by J.C. if you want to be a big wig around the Roman Empire. And if you do, avoid making friends.

    (image)

    A dramatized version of the tragedy, Julius Caesar was written by Shakespeare in the late 16th-century. It’s one of three major Shakespearean tragedies based on characters from Roman History. (The others are Anthony and Cleopatra and Coriolanus.) You’ve probably heard about it, but if you haven’t, you can read it by taking a 9th-grade English class. Or if you understand Semaphore, you can catch the highlights in this video:

    Here’s a rundown of some of the other more significant things to occur on March 15:

    • In 1493, Christopher Columbus returns to Spain from his first trip to the New World.
    • In 1545, the Council of Trent meets for the first time.
    • In 1781, the Battle of Guilford Courthouse pits American colonial revolutionaries against British forces. British General Charles Cornwallis defeats Colonial forces despite being outnumber more than 2:1.
    • In 1820, Maine joins the Union as the 23rd State.
    • In 1848, revolution breaks out in Hungary, as it did in many other European countries that year. The ruling Habsburg monarchy have to start listening to the Reform party.
    • In 1916, Woodrow Wilson sends 4,800 U.S. troops across the Mexican border in pursuit of Pancho Villa.
    • In 1917, Nicholas II of Russia steps down as Tsar, and his brother ascends to the throne.
    • In 1939, German troops occupy Bohemia and Moravia. Czechoslovakia doesn’t exist anymore.
    • In 1956, My Fair Lady, a musical based on George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion premiers on Broadway.
    • In 1961, South Africa withdraws from the Commonwealth of Nations.
    • In 1985, the first Internet domain name (symbolics.com) is registered, and military dictatorship in Brazil comes to an end (not related).
    • In 1990, Michaeil Gorbachevis elected the first President of the Soviet Union.
    • Also in 1990, my dear friend and sister-in-law is born. You don’t know her, but Happy Birthday, Sandy!
    • Also in 1990, a lot of other people are born.
    • In 2011, the Syrian Uprising begins, a part of the Arab Spring sequence of protests in the Middle East and North Africa.
    • In 2012, a lot of things happen [Warning: shameless link to WebProNews homepage detected.]

    Also on this day, Beware the Ides of March trends on Twitter. Here’s a glimpse of what people are saying:

    Smith & Wesson wishes our fans no misfortune today. Beware the ides of March.(image) 29 minutes ago via Facebook ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    CAESAR, Y U NO BEWARE THE IDES OF MARCH?! #SHAKESPEARE(image) 8 hours ago via Mobile Web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    When they say ‘Beware the Ides of March,’ what they really mean is ‘Beware being stabbed 23 times.’ Which is actually good advice every day.(image) 12 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    When do I start to beware the ides of March? If I start tomorrow I will feel ill prepared.(image) 13 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    What’s best place/position for tom’w Beware the Ides of March day? Missionary under the covers or spoon under dining table?(image) 18 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Beware the Ides of March jokes.(image) 9 minutes ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Beware The Ides of March. It’s just not a very good film.(image) 40 minutes ago via HootSuite ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    By “Beware the Ides of March” you mean avoid the homeless woman bouncing up and down saying “Oh yeah”, right? Cause I already did that.(image) 52 seconds ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Beware the Ides of March – Celebrating my favorite writer of all time, William Shakespeare & his amazing play, Julius Caesar! Et tu Brute(image) 2 minutes ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Beware the Ides of March, for you may be crushed by a 7-ton asteroid at any moment(image) 3 minutes ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Yes, yes. Ides of March. Beware. Yada yada. Where were all of you people 2,056 years ago? Bet you don’t do this to @RealLincoln on 13 April.(image) 8 days ago via Twitter for Mac ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    So take care today, watch your back, make an obligatory tweet, and avoid being a tyrant. And if some guy named Tereseus tells you to call in sick, then you might just wanna take a personal day.

    I’ll leave you this ides with another clip, this one from the Reduced Shakespeare Company’s The Compleat Wrks of Wllm Shkspr (Abridged). The relevant bit ends at 2:50, if you’re short on time, but the whole thing’s worth watching:

  • Elizabeth Smart Engaged: Twitter Doesn’t Care.

    Remember Elizabeth Smart? She’s getting married. When news like this breaks, you can expect it to be all over Twitter.

    The country is clamoring for news about the engagement, as is evidenced by Google Trends. And while Twitter may often break news, and provide up to the second commentary, sometimes the conversation is just boring. This is one of those times.

    In fact, Elizabeth Smart is not even a Twitter trend. One of the top trends is #mustybutthole. A Bronx Tale is also trending. It must be on TV.

    Suffice it to say, this is one of those times when “the conversation” isn’t so much around what everybody actually wants to know about. Smart continues to be a hot search trend.

    Anyhow, here’s the most interesting tweets about Elizabeth Smart from the last several hours.

    Currently Trending: elizabeth smart, seal and heidi klum, … on Google Search. 46 minutes ago via twitterfeed · powered by @socialditto

    She deserves happiness!!! RT @usweekly: #ICYMI Kidnap victim and ABC News correspondent Elizabeth Smart is engaged! http://t.co/qbNMp2K1 1 hour ago via Echofon · powered by @socialditto

    “Til death or kidnapping do us part” -exerpt from Elizabeth Smart’s wedding vows 2 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Does anyone else find this just a bit too snarky and filled with #Mormon stereotypes.Elizabeth Smart engaged, will wed http://t.co/37PTcBPK 1 hour ago via Tweet Button · powered by @socialditto

    What a weird question to ask. RT @usweekly: Kidnap victim and ABC News correspondent Elizabeth Smart is engaged! Are you happy for her? 1 hour ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    heidi klum getting a divorce and elizabeth smart getting engaged?!?! #wtf 3 hours ago via Twitter for Android · powered by @socialditto

    @sudieraeEp elizabeth smart is engaged. Even the people I wish I were friends with are getting married. 4 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

  • Meineke Gets Effective Twitter Marketing

    Meineke Gets Effective Twitter Marketing

    Currently, there’s a silly trend populating Twitter feeds everywhere, one that uses the #ItsOkayToCheatif hashtag. The tweets responding to the trend are primarily from bored kids who are trying to sound deep and compelling, or maybe even humorous. Ultimately, it’s a throwaway trend that will fall by the wayside in an hour or so.

    But, one car care company in particular provided us with a valuable lesson on how to capitalize on even the most innocuous Twitter trend in order to promote their business. The company in question is Meineke, and instead of adding yet another throwaway tweet about when it’s acceptable to cheat, their social media manager demonstrated a nifty way to use these silly trends to your business’ advantage.

    Take a look:

    #itsokaytocheatif on changing your oil if you want your engine to get destroyed. Bring this coupon and keep it honest http://t.co/kjRZXesU 19 minutes ago via Social Office Suite · powered by @socialditto

    When the link is clicked, visitors are taken to a Meineke coupon page that features a Twitter special coupon:

    Twitter Coupon

    In fact, the URL of the linked page is revealing in and of itself:

    http://www.meineke.com/twitter/

    And that, folks, is the correct way to capitalize on a Twitter trend, regardless of how silly it may or may not be. Granted, something like this would obviously not be appropriate if it was done in an insensitive manner, like, say during the outpouring of tweets concerning the Japanese earthquakes or the tornadoes that trashed various cities around the United States earlier this year.

    However, if it’s a throwaway trend we’re talking about, something the #ItsOkayToCheatif trend clearly is, then tailoring a promotional tweet to fit such a trend is a great way to take advantage of all that Twitter noise. Now, can a coupon page actually be considered a signal to be acknowledged over the normal Twitter noise? Perhaps not, but it’s still an effective way to leverage something all the Twitter users are discussing.

    Hey, even bored kids with not much to do need oil changes too, or at least, their friends who have cars do.

  • ESPN Gets Scorched On Twitter over Bruce Feldman Incident

    Bruce Feldman is a very popular sportswriter who specializes in college football coverage. Until today, you may not have heard of him unless you follow the sport and/or are a regular visitor of ESPN.com. Now, thanks to the popular #freebruce hashtag, Bruce Feldman is now a star of the Twitter universe, and his employers are taking an absolute beating. Feldman, according to multiple reports across the sports blogosphere, has been suspended indefinitely by the Worldwide Leader for acknowledged reasons unknown.

    Speculation, however, centers on a book Feldman took part in, one that told the story of Mike Leach, the former head coach of Texas Tech’s football program. Leach was fired from his position for the apparent mistreatment of a player, Adam James. James’ father, Craig, is a prominent, yet oft-lampooned, announcer for ESPN’s college football broadcasts. After he was fired, Leach put some of the blame towards the senior James use of ESPN’s reach as the story progressed played no small part in his termination. If you’d like the comprehensive background, the details are available all around the Internet, including Wikipedia.

    Suffice to say, Leach, James and ESPN were no longer on each other’s Christmas card list. Enter Feldman, who was commissioned to write a book from Leach’s perspective, something ESPN apparently gave Feldman permission to do.

    Both the SBNation’s college football page and the SportsbyBrooks blog are front and center for coverage of this developing story, and the idea is Feldman was suspended for, well, taking down and organizing content from a former head coach who doesn’t see eye to eye with a current ESPN employee. Furthermore, ESPN is not talking about the Bruce Feldman situation, making it appear as if the speculation concerning Feldman’s apparent suspension hits the nail on the head.

    Now, support for Feldman has spilled over into the Twitter world, with, as pointed out by SbB, Sports Illustrated college football scribe Stewart Mandell leading the charge:

    One of the finest writers in the profession was suspended today because of a company’s own irresponsible journalism. #freebruce 16 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    If you appreciate journalists who do their job professionally and with respect … then boycott ESPN. Seriously. #FreeBruce 16 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    It’s 10 am. Has ESPN reversed its spineless, unjustifiable suspension of Bruce Feldman yet? … No? … Then away we go #FreeBruce 3 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    ESPN suspended a fine journalist to protect an announcer who spews cliches every Thursday. ESPN thinks you’re stupid, America. #FreeBruce 3 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    It’s safe to say Mandel is championing Feldman’s cause, something the following retweets demonstrate quite well:

    RT @JayPaterno: ….in ALL of my dealings w/ @BFeldmanESPN he has been fair & ethical & professional. What more can you ask in journalism? 3 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    Don t know detalls about the sit. with Bruce Feldman but I know he has been a super asset to ESPN.com- wow rec’d lots of tweets about Bruce. 16 minutes ago via Twitter for Android · powered by @socialditto

    Vitale’s tweet also appeared in Mandel’s Twitter stream. Clearly, Mandell is quite adept at rousing the masses, because, as indicated, #freebruce is now a trending Twitter topic, and ESPN is taking a beating.

    Free Bruce

    Some highlights, seeing how that’s what made ESPN famous in the first place. You may notice a trend of sportswriters changing their profile pictures to Feldman’s as well:

    Mike Leach: “Bruce had permission ahead of time to do this book from ESPN” #freebruce http://bit.ly/oj1R9q 1 hour ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    Doesn’t it kind of feel like ESPN locked Bruce Feldman in a shed? #freebruce 3 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    What have you done today to show support for Bruce Feldman? I’m talking mostly to journalists. We can’t let this stand. #freebruce 2 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Love the solidarity, but #freebruce isn’t enough. What would be enough? #boocraigjames 5 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    Dan Patrick steps up on the #FreeBruce bandwagon. Doesn’t pull punches, calls out @craigjames32. (HT SportsGrid) http://bit.ly/o0YV8r 2 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    Don’t know Bruce Feldman. Don’t need to. Corporate bullying has no place anywhere. #freebruce 1 hour ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Come on @espn4d, @ESPN_ReceDavis, @ESPN_SEC, I know y’all are in tough spots, but they can’t suspend you all. Stop the injustice. #FreeBruce 3 hours ago via Twitter for Android · powered by @socialditto

    I am not surprised that ESPN suspended Bruce Feldman. This is the same company that leaves Berman on the air but fires Olbermann. #FreeBruce 6 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    I doubt this story will make the evening SportsCenter…

    While Twitter trends normally receive all kinds of responses, what’s a little more unique about this one is other prominent sportswriters following Mandel’s lead. People like Jason Whitlock, Greg Doyel, Andy Staples, and others. While Whitlock’s issues with ESPN have been well documented, which helps explain him taking the opportunity to throw gasoline on the fire, seeing the outcry from others in Feldman’s field is refreshing.

    For another great look at the Feldman situation, and that part Craig James plays, or perhaps should play, check out the excellent article by perhaps the best college football blogger/writer in the business, Spencer Hall. Until then:

    #FreeBruce.

  • Dirk Nowitski: Unfortunate Twitter Trend

    The NBA Finals started last night with Game One going to the Miami Heat, who seem to be playing the role of villain for the 2011 NBA Playoffs. The Heat’s opponents, the Dallas Mavericks, are led by perhaps one of the best scorers in the NBA not named Michael Jordan or Wilt Chamberlain in Dirk Nowitzki, who has had a masterful playoff run thus far, and has been receiving a great deal of fan love for his play.

    However, as is the case since social media and the sports world has become one, combined with the fickle, immediate nature of fans nowadays, Nowitzki has become the butt of a Twitter-based joke.

    A quick glance at the current Twitter trends and you’ll notice “Dirk NoRingski,” a blast that makes fun of the fact Nowitzki hasn’t won an NBA Championship. Furthermore, it’s pretty clear that many of those who watched last night’s game believe the series is over and the Heat will the new kings of the NBA. While that may or may not come to pass, there are still at least three more games to be played before Nowitzki earns such a designation, one that brought defenders as well as joke-makers to the party:

    i feel bad for Dirk,everyone’s making fun of him with this NoRingski thingless than a minute ago via web Favorite Retweet Reply

    dirk noringski tore a tendon in his finger lastnight. It was already over now u Heat Haters got an excuse to y Miami beat Dallas lolless than a minute ago via UberSocial Favorite Retweet Reply

    Dirk NoRingski is out-trending Kid Cudi & Blake Lively, but has his hands full with Kazaam. #SentencesNoOneEverWritesless than a minute ago via web Favorite Retweet Reply

    Dirk NoRingski? Really? Last time I checked @KingJames didn’t have a ring either…At least Dirk stayed loyal to the team that drafted himless than a minute ago via web Favorite Retweet Reply

    If you really think Dirk NoRingski is going to lead anyone to a NBA championship YOU STUPID! Larry Bird retired years ago.less than a minute ago via web Favorite Retweet Reply

    Perhaps the most accurate tweet of the bunch:

    If you go check out the trending topic of Dirk NoRingski, 90% of it is people complaining about it, you’re feeding the beast peopleless than a minute ago via web Favorite Retweet Reply


    So? What happens if Miami loses Game Two? Will there be a Twitter trend of the hashtag “#LeChoke” or “Dwyane Weak?” We’ll have to find out after Thursday’s game, but considering the nature of Twitter, it’ll probably happen.