SharpSmith | Shared With: Everyone - May 13 2007 | statistics, internet, porn
SharpSmith | Shared With: Everyone - Jan 28 2008 | social, tendency, statistics
SharpSmith | Shared With: Everyone - Jan 19 2008 | statistics, web, tendencyShareViewed: 1 Time
SharpSmith | Shared With: Everyone - Jan 03 2008 | business, startups, statistics, reviewShareViewed: 5 Times
SharpSmith | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 21 2007 | web, social, statistics
SharpSmith | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 21 2007 | video, google, statistics, 2read
click to playQuoted: "Theorizing from Data: Avoiding the Capital MistakePeter Norvig""It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data."" Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's words fr...
SharpSmith | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 10 2007 | social, video, statistics, tendency
Quoted: A new data release from The Face of the Web, Ipsos Insight's annual study of Internet and Technology trends, shows (probably quite obviously) ...
ShareViewed: 3 Times
SharpSmith | Shared With: Everyone - May 18 2007 | video, iptv, statistics
Quoted: eMarketer provides e-business research, statistics, demographics and Internet usage data for online marketers. Products and services include market research reports and online database subscriptions.
ShareViewed: 2 Times
SharpSmith | Shared With: Everyone - May 12 2007 | statistics, wikipedia, economics, sience, definition
An Amazon employee described the Long Tail as follows: "We sold more books today that didn't sell at all yesterday than we sold today of all the books that did sell yesterday."[4] In the same sense, the user-edited Internet encyclopedia Wikipedia has many low-popularity articles that, collectively, create a higher quantity of demand than a limited number of mainstream articles found in a conventional encyclopedia such as the Encyclopædia Britannica.[5]
The term is derived from the XY graph that is created when charting popularity to inventory. For example, in the graph shown above the total inventory of Wikipedia articles is along the bottom line, while the popularity rating (web page hit statistics) is along the vertical axis. So, for example, the Wikipedia homepage would receive the most views and be on the far left in the green, while this page might be on the far right in the yellow, as would most of Wikipedia's articles. The same could be said for Amazon's book inventory or Netflix's movie inventory. The total volume of low popularity items exceeds the volume of high popularity items.
SharpSmith | Shared With: Everyone - May 03 2007 | IPTV, statistics
Quoted: “Viewers across Europe are no longer satisfied with fitting into schedules dictated by broadcasters and are turning to the choice and flexibility offered by TV ...
ShareViewed: 2 Times



Send SharpSmith a friend request or a personal message instead.