Social Networks

Entries related to social networks, group psychology, anthropology, and really any of the social sciences.

Unfollow Friday @TwitCleaner http://who.unfollowed.me

Typically, people post Follow Friday messages of people that they are following and suggesting that other people follow them back. Today, I’m turning it on its head and posting Unfollow Friday. What’s this about?

Well, currently, I’m following around 2900 people on Twitter. That’s a lot of people. With that, I may not read as many tweets as closely as I should. If I pare down my list a little, I may get more useful information.

Looking a little more closely, when I started working on this blog post, I was following 2911 people. According to who.unfollowed.me, 958 of them are not following me. That leaves 1953 mutual follows. At the same time, there are 3184 people following me. Taking out the mutual followers, that leaves 1231 that I’m not following.

Many of the people that I follow that are not following me back make sense. Using The Twit Cleaner can help give a better understanding. Curiously enough, it reported 958 people that I follow are ‘potentially garbage’. These are not the same 958 people that I follow who are not following me, but there is some overlap.

Two followers were listed as very often having multiple at signs in their messages. 255 followers post nothing but links. 53 repeat the same URLs. 13 repeat the same message. 125 have other ‘dodgy behavior’ and haven’t posted recently. 222 haven’t posted anything in over a month. 48 Don’t interact much with others. 43 Don’t interact at all with others. 128 hardly follow anyone. 17 talk all the time. 52 post mostly retweets and 1 post mostly just quotes.

I don’t find people who post nothing but links all that annoying. I post a lot of links. Many of my posts come from Foursquare and Twitterfeed which both include links. Repeating same URL and the same message is also somewhat understandable. People who haven’t posted in a long time don’t take up space in my twitter stream and I don’t worry about it.

The biggest overlap between people that I follow who do not follow me back and one of the Twitclean categories is followers that hardly follow anyone. None of them follow me. Most are news sources, corporate publicity sites and celebrities.

So, I’ve slowly been cleaning out unfollowers and others who are less interesting. Hopefully, this will mean I catch more interesting tweets going forward.

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Wordless Wednesday



In The Woods, originally uploaded by Aldon.

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#ff @OneTrueFan @bpm140 @BlazingMinds @Ileane

Yesterday, I stumbled across Karen Woodham's (@BlazingMinds) blog post, Are You A One True Fan?. Being the innovator/early adopter type, I thought I would give it a try. Unfortunately, I’ve been having some computer difficulties and soon after I installed their Chromium extension, by computer crashed, taking several hours of work with it. It was pretty frustrating. To make things worse, for the next 24 hours, my computer crawled, and I could barely get anything done. I disabled the extension and things still crawled.

However, after a bit of cleaning up and time away from the computer, things are running smoothly again, so I’ve re-enabled the widget and started exploring.

As I started exploring, I noticed another name, Eric Marcoullier (@bpm140). I remember Eric from when he was co-founder and product guy of MyBlogLog, so it really caught my attention. Eric is CEO and Co-Founder of OneTrueFan, which he says “is one of several companies seeking to ‘gamify’ web sites.”

With the OneTrueFan extension loaded, you ‘check-in’, ala Foursquare, to each website you visit. You score points by sharing links. You earn badges, called patches in OneTrueFan, and there is a leaderboard. There is a way of setting up people that you are ‘following’, but I haven’t found any way to follow people or import who I’m following from Twitter or Facebook.

There are Twitter and Facebook connections, but I worry about the feedback loop and it being too spammy, so I’m not sharing a lot of links that way yet. In my normal blog surfing, I’ve already become the ‘OneTrueFan’ of nearly a dozen sites and have score over 1500 points.

@BlazingMinds points to @Ileane as the person that got her into OneTrueFan, so I figured I’d follow her and give her a shout out as well. It will be very interesting to watch how OneTrueFan evolves.

Wordless Wednesday



Picking Pumpkins, originally uploaded by Aldon.
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Understanding Our New Haven Promise

Yesterday, I received a press release from the City of New Haven. It was announcing an event scheduled for this morning that would

be an announcement of national interest that will change New Haven and the region forever...
and will be viewed by every student at every New Haven Public School because the subject of this event will completely change their lives, their families and their neighborhoods. 

It sounded pretty exciting. Could this be an announcement about GoogleHaven? Or, would it simply be some overhyped city announcement.

What I found interesting is that it was tied to the site Our New Haven which is being run by the folks from Ripple100 who have been so involved in GoogleHaven and many other social media activities around New Haven.

It coincided with a ‘Social Media Sync’ gathering at The Grove. Many social media enthusiasts sat down to pancakes and share thoughts as they waited for the announcement.

The live stream started, stuttered, and then failed for many people trying to watch it. There just didn’t seem to be enough bandwidth, and GoogleHaven wasn’t the announcement telling people of more bandwidth to come. Instead, it was ‘The New Haven Promise’.

Already, venerable news organizations like the New Haven Independent have their stories about New Haven Promise up and if you want details about the program, it is a good place to start.

The article talks about Ripple100‘s involvement:

To promote the new program, the school board on Monday approved a contract of up to $20,000 with media consultant Andre Yap, and his business Ripple 100 on Chapel Street, to maintain a New Haven School Change/Promise Website from Oct. 26, 2010 to June 30, 2011. The money will come from the school district operating budget.

Andre was at The Grove to talk about The Promise. He talked about how a similar program in Kalamozoo increased housing values by up to 10% when it started. He spoke about people moving to the area. They would shop at local stores. They would build the workforce. They would make New Haven more attractive to companies looking to hire. It all sounded a bit like the liberal version of trickle-down politics.

This is where the discussion got interesting. One noted critic of the DeStefano administration said that he had always been skeptical of the city’s school building agenda. Yet with The Promise, it all came together. To have a successful program like The Promise, you need to have good schools. Promising tuition to students who achieve in high school doesn’t do much if you don’t provide better ways for them to achieve. Yet at the same time, providing better ways to achieve in school without incentives, without a promise, also isn’t going to do much.

There were discussions about how this applies to undocumented students as well as students attending magnet schools. While out-of-town magnet school students are not promised college tuition, proponents argue that local students will be more motivated. This will result in more motivated teachers, and this will benefit all students, no matter where they come from.

Many of the regulars at The Grove are tied to non-profit organizations and the question quickly moved to what can we, the members of the greater New Haven community do to help students succeed. As various people talked about different programs, the Citywide Youth Coalition was highlighted as a potential focal point and clearinghouse for people interested in helping New Haven High School students succeed.

There was also a lively discussion on Twitter. Some spoke about accessibility to post-secondary education for undocumented students and the importance of the Dream Act. Others wondered when a similar program would be available in their municipality. @Gaber205 tweeted, “I am waiting the similar announcement from Quinnipiac about Hamden kids. No?”

The New Haven Independent article noted

Promise will also pay up to $2,500 in tuition for in-state, nonprofit colleges and universities, including Albertus Magnus, Quinnipiac, Yale and Wesleyan.

So, Quinnipiac stands to gain from this, as does Wesleyan. Perhaps Middletown should be considering Promise as well.

The article at the New Haven Independent ended off with the standard back and forth between cynical and hopeful readers. In many ways, the success of the program most likely boils down to how involved the people of New Haven become. Those who sit back doing nothing but predict decay are likely to contribute to that decay. Those who take an active role in revitalizing New Haven can make a difference. It is a choice each one of us makes as we think about our social contract with the people around us.

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