This is a great post by Brian Solis at Techcrunch on rising influence of micro-blogging and “status” services like Twitter and Facebook in today’s journalism. Ultimately, it concludes, its not the mediums but rather the quality of content and how its received by the social community. Enjoy reading here.
What I'm Doing...
- @themba_m for sure. But #arsenal is looking shody! Time for wins is overdue! in reply to themba_m 1 day ago
- Then again, there is the #superbowl. But given Africa's timing i'll be dead asleep! 1 day ago
- Seriously, after today's game #arsenal should be thinking about sacking wenger. Its embaressing! 1 day ago
- More updates...
Posting tweet...
Recent Comments
- Humphrey on Kenya launch for US$ 1Million Nokia Mobile Developer Competition.
- Graice kelly on Kenya launch for US$ 1Million Nokia Mobile Developer Competition.
- martin muiga on Embracing Digital Marketing Presentation at Kenya Music Week 2009.
- Moses Kemibaro on Kenya Home Broadband Internet Comparisons.
- Eddy on I&M Bank launches local e-commerce services in Kenya
My Calendar of Blog Posts
Tags
2008
2009
africa
announcement
Broadband
business daily
cable
cnn
data
dotsavvy
download
eassy
Facebook
go live
google
growth
ICT
Internet
internet marketing
Interview
Kenya
launch
m-pesa
marketing
Mobile
Moses Kemibaro
Nairobi
olympics
orange
Orange Kenya
Presentation
rates
safaricom
seacom
social media
Statistics
teams
telkom kenya
Twitter
web
Web Site
win
YU
zain
zap

0 Response to “Can the Statusphere Save Journalism?”