Review Almost 5000 Tweets from Interent Librarian 2009
The archiving of social media may become a big issue. How will it be archived? Who, if anyone. will the info be of value to? Will different services require differnt protocols to archive and retrieve? Privacy concerns? These are just a couple of the many issues that need to be discussed. Would a business researcher find a searchable archive of tweets useful if they were compiling a report about what was said about a their company or a competitor over an extended period of time? What about the very long term? If social media lives up to what's predicted what resources will historians use to review this period of time? Again, things to think about. We wonder if the Internet Archive or its Archive-It service will begin offering social media archiving?
When it comes to Twitter just finding and accessing a tweet from a few weeks ago can be a challenge. We did a search using Twitter's own search engine and limited our query to results from the month of September. We were unable to find a single result for the words Chicago and video.
As far as Internet Librarian 2009 goes, Gary was in attendance and on Monday wanted to test out a free service named Twapper Keeper. It's a free service that creates a permanent* archive of public tweets based on a hashtag, in this case, #il2009.
According to the FAQ, the site is updated every five minutes and if you need to make a change you can contact the provider of Twapper Keeper. We've asked the provider of Twapper Keeper a few questions, one of them is if we're seeing every #il2009 tweet or just selected tweets. If/when we get a response, we will post it here.
Prefer to view smaller groups of tweets at one time? It's easy, make your selection of how many you want to review at one time near the top of the page.
If you didn't attend the conference, it's a great way to get a feel for what took place. If you were there, the archive may be useful to learn about sessions you were unable to attend. It's also a "modern way" of sharing "what went down" with a variety of groups.
* Finally, it's true, the archive is only as permanent as the service is. That's the case with so many Web 2.0 tools and services, available one day, not available a week later. If you really want to make the info permanent either download the tweets or take a scrolling screen cap and save them locally, or use a locally based archiving tool in the first place. This RWW article by Sarah Perez provides several resources to archive Twitter content both web-based and locally.
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Recently I have found myself cooing over visualisation maps (and heat maps) of health and well being resources. The content rich data is overlayed with mapping technologies, and some interesting themes and patterns are emerging.
A lot of the talk around social media in the last year has been around information overload. Social media has provided us with new and exciting ways to create content. But it has also meant learning new ways to manage and engage with social media tools. Are we teetering on the edge of an information overload precipice?
Information overload is a figment of your imagination. Or a failure of your filter. Or a symptom of your technological submissiveness. Depends on who you ask.
What if you had to sort through 3.5 million articles and social media posts a day and try to pull out the most relevant items for your organisation? What if you then had to cobble it all together into something readable for your top groups and executives in your organisation?
Alacra Compliance saves time by aggregating information from both free and fee-based sources and enabling users to conduct an accurate federated search across these sources (coined “simultaneous search” by Alacra).