Yes, the daily hot topics may surprise many people. I could not believe what I saw when the system went online for the first time a few months ago. If you are used to reading tech news or WSJ, you may get a shock. The daily conversations on twitter, and probably other social networking sites, are mostly about TV shows, movies, games, and other entertainment stuff. But, on the other hand, this also makes sense. People are talking about their lives on social networking sites, and life is not all about technology and stock market, at least for most ordinary people.
Web2express Digest does not cut or selection of topics. It just shows whatever comes out of the ongoing conversations from millions of people. I think we can learn a lot from this information in addition to becoming more effective in navigating through the twitter sphere. -aj -- AJ Chen, PhD Co-Chair, Semantic Web SIG, sdforum.org http://web2express.org Palo Alto, CA On Thu, May 14, 2009 at 10:03 AM, Patrick Burrows <pburr...@categorical.ly>wrote: > > That's awesome, AJ. > > Though it hurts me in the opinion-of-humanity part of my brain to learn how > heavily represented American Idol is on that list. > > > -- > Patrick Burrows > http://Categorical.ly (the Best Twitter Client Possible) > @Categorically > > -----Original Message----- > From: twitter-development-talk@googlegroups.com > [mailto:twitter-development-t...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of AJ > Sent: Wednesday, May 13, 2009 6:36 PM > To: Twitter Development Talk > Subject: [twitter-dev] twitter digest not available > > > Hi, thanks to twitter's api and the api team, the data feed for data > mining is just wonderful. I have put together a real time system that > takes in the feed and does some NLP analysis on tweets using open > tools like Open Calais and openNLP. The results are freely available > on http://web2express.org/. Using this twiiter web app, you can > spot daily hot topics and for each hot topic, quickly find the top > contributing twitter users. I hope this real time information will > help users to understand the popular topics at any given moment and > easily identify who to follow. > > Please let me know if you have any comment. > > -aj > AJ Chen, PhD > Co-Chair, Semantic Web SIG, sdforum.org > http://web2express.org > Palo Alto, CA > >