lunes, 21 de marzo de 2016

Twitter's First 10 Years #LoveTwitter.


New York City, NY, United States of America to March 21st, 2016 (CBS News). It's time to wish Twitter a happy 10th birthday -- in 140 characters or less. On Monday, the microblogging site celebrated one decade of hashtags, trending topics, and tweets that have spread virally around the world.



"Throughout the years, you've made Twitter what it is today and you're shaping what it will be in the future. Thank you for making history, driving change, lifting each other up and laughing together every day," Twitter declared in a blog post.




That simple message would pave the way for newsmaking, re-tweetable commentary on everything from the Arab Spring uprisings to the U.S. presidential campaigns to the #OscarsSoWhite controversy.



Hashtags

In August 2007, the hashtag (#) was first introduced by Chris Messina as a way to unify conversations around big topics. It became a phenomenon in itself, and helped drive coverage of major news events like the Boston Marathon bombings (#BostonStrong) and outrage over the kidnapping of Nigerian schoolgirls by the extremist group Boko Haram (#BringBackOurGirls), as well as unforgettable pop culture moments like the uproar over #TheDress and the birth of Prince George of Cambridge (#RoyalBaby).

But while many individual events have galvanized Twitter conversations over the past 10 years, the most popular hashtag of all is the simple #FF -- or "follow Friday" -- which has generated 539 million mentions over the years.

Emoji


For mobile users who are big emoji fans, want to know what the most tweeted emoji has been? According to Twitter, it's the "tears of joy" symbol, a smiley face that is laughing so hard it's crying. That emoji has been tweeted 14.5 billion times to date.

Most mentions

The most mentioned person on the site is not a president, prime minister, or activist. Instead, it's pop star Justin Bieber, who has been cited 943 million times. Singer Katy Perry is the most followed person, with 84 million follows to date. The event that generated the most tweets per minute was 2014 World Cup Final, which generated 618,725 tweets every 60 seconds.

Trending topics

Despite signs of trouble in recent years -- the company has been experiencing stalled user growth as it struggles to compete with newer, fresher social sites and trends -- Twitter's appeal might rest in its ability to quickly connect people from disparate parts of the world.

If you look at the visualization below, you can see how hot topics like a presidential election victory, World Cup title, or boy band breakup can spread throughout the world in minutes.


© 2016 ALL RIGTHS RESERVED
MSH WorldWide By Marcelo Santiago Hernández™.

sábado, 5 de marzo de 2016

2016 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC).

Washington DC, March 05th 2016 (CPAC, 2016). The Conservatives convened for the American Conservative Union’s annual four-day Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Md. In addition to panel discussions on conservative issues, many speakers are on hand at this year’s conference, including Ben Carson, John Kasich, Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio. Donald Trump was due to speak but dropped out at the last minute.
US Senator Ted Cruz struck first in a handful of presidential nomination contests, decisively winning Kansas and Maine, and boosting his claim as the most viable alternative to billionaire frontrunner Donald Trump. On the Democratic side, it was Senator Bernie Sanders, the self-described democratic socialist, who claimed the first two victories, in Kansas and Nebraska. But Hillary Clinton bounced back to easily win Louisiana, seen as the weekend's big prize. 


For Republicans, the Saturday races provide the first tests of whether the establishment's desperate effort to halt Trump, led this week by 2012 nominee Mitt Romney, is having any effect on voters. 


The brash real estate mogul Trump is ahead in the all-important delegate count for the Republicans, having won 10 of the 17 states that have now voted in the process that determines the nominees for both parties. But Cruz's wins are a reminder that while Trump still appears to be the likely nominee, it is by no means inevitable.


The conservative senator performed beyond expectations in Kansas, where he earned 48.2 percent of the vote, doubling up on Trump who received 23.3 percent. Senator Marco Rubio was third at 16.7, followed by Ohio Governor John Kasich with 10.7 percent. In Maine, it was a startling result for the arch-conservative Cruz in the more moderate New England region. The centrist candidate Romney won Maine caucuses twice, in 2012 and 2008.

© 2016 ALL RIGTHS RESERVED
MSH WorldWide By Marcelo Santiago Hernández™.