Archive for category Administrative

Twitter: A Solution to the Follow Spammers

Posted by Laura on Tuesday, 5 October, 2010

I’m having another period of annoyance with Twitter. I really feel like I should probably turn off alerts for followers again because right now? I’m pretty much putting people on a spammer list if they have 2,000 people they already follow. I’m also sending out cranky DMs blasting people for doing this sort of following.

For the past two months, I’ve spent a lot of time looking at Twitter. I’ve looked at follower counts. I’ve looked at follower geographic patterns. I’ve looked at people’s descriptions. I’ve looked at people’s geographic locations. The point of this is often to determine the geographic location of Australian sport fandom. I’ve read a fair bit on technology blogs about Twitter to help further my own understanding of Twitter to help me with intended mini-literature review in my Twitter chapter of my dissertation. I’ve basically been ODing on Twitter. There is a lot of interesting stuff out there.

But as a user? I’m getting pretty cranky. Seriously cranky. Every day, it feels like I’m getting 2 to 10 follows (across about 3 different accounts) from people who I don’t know, who are not geographically close to where I’m writing about, who don’t appear interested in professional sports, who have low interaction rates, who have 2,000+ people they follow. As part of my research, I constantly ask: What is the ROI for a team on Twitter in terms of where their audience is located? How can they best leverage their network? What can they provide for their fans to induce them to follow them? How can their fans help them? As a user, I can’t see how the people like I describe who follow me gain any benefit from that. (They can’t read me. I can barely keep up with 350. I function more or less because Americans get neglected as they post while I sleep.) (In one case, I got followed and unfollowed by about 5 times by the same user with 4,000 followers. ) As a user, I can’t see what they offer me. They rarely bother to explain.

And this is killing my desire to stay on Twitter. Seriously killing my desire to stay on Twitter. I just can’t. There are people I want and need to keep track of on Twitter for professional reasons. (The personal ones are almost exclusively on Facebook these days. On that level, I don’t feel the need to stay.) If you’re not active on Twitter and you cover social media, people sometimes doubt your legitimacy because you’re not using the product you’re discussing.

What I’d really like is for Twitter to make the following reforms:

1. Add a field for follow philosophy. It can be selecting from a list. It can be freeform writing. This way, when people follow others, they can see if they have a mutual philosophy. “I follow back people everyone.” “I follow friends, family and professional acquaintances.” “I follow celebrities.” “I follow only people with less than 1,000 followers.”
2. Allow people to block people with certain follow totals unless you follow them first. (I want to block anyone with 1,500 people they follow from following me first. If you want to follow me, interact with me first. Otherwise, add me to a list.) This way, spam following by power users is cut back.

The two following methods would help to kill off the Twitter spam following (and yes, your unwanted e-mail notification that you followed me to never read me is spam. It is unwanted and unsolicited and you didn’t indicate any mutual interest.) and help prevent my own fatigue. I use and prefer Facebook more than Twitter precisely because I’m not inundated with unwanted announcements like that.

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-10-03

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 3 October, 2010
  • I'm at Wikimedia Foundation (149 New Montgomery, San Francisco): #
  • I'm at Wikimedia Foundation (149 New Montgomery, San Francisco): #
  • I'm at San Francisco International Airport (SFO) (1 S McDonnell Rd, at S Link Rd, San Francisco) w/ 45 others. 4sq.com/MTivk #
  • I am reading Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do #Traffic bit.ly/ceSiAA #
  • Back in Australia. :D Had great time at WMF. Learned lots. Excited to be back home. :) #
  • Library toilet stall wall… twitpic.com/2tgtiv #
  • I earned the Check-in Pro sticker on @GetGlue! bit.ly/aaMSne #
  • One of my favorite tools changed and I can't use it anymore. :( Need a new tool for batch reverse geocoding with output to table for excel. #
  • Got sport books. More cricket books than other sports here… (@ Vinnies) 4sq.com/ahUNhm #
  • Quick question: Which one is better? Virgin or Qantas for short haul Canberra to Melbourne? Qantas is $30 more. #
  • Went Virgin Blue. #
  • Anyone in Melbourne willing to put me up for a few days around the 21 to 25 Oct? :) Poor student needs help. :) #
  • Id #
  • I earned the Triathlon sticker on @GetGlue! bit.ly/dy23gJ #
  • Pictures from WikiProject Screencast: bit.ly/aTMqE5 #

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-09-26

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 26 September, 2010
  • My bike and nifty bike bags. twitpic.com/2q7oip #
  • I should do a weekly podcast of my degree progress and treat it like a sport report: Stats, major accomplishments, needs improvement… #
  • Is the word cunt viewed as less offensive in Australia than the USA? Where it is pretty hugely offensive? #
  • Greyhound to Sydney airport. Leaves in 90 minutes. Yay! (@ Jolimont Tourist Centre) 4sq.com/dbUpz1 #
  • Greyhound bus station in Canberra. twitpic.com/2qggqw #
  • iPhone plugged in to not waste battery. twitpic.com/2qgh63 #
  • Yay! Arrived way to early to checkin but here! (@ Sydney International Airport (SYD) ✈ w/ 2 others) 4sq.com/aVXNPp #
  • Cranky at airport. Not healthy mindset. #
  • I earned the Lone Wolf sticker on @GetGlue! bit.ly/dck62N #
  • I can play with my iPod the whole long flight! twitpic.com/2qk52c #
  • Flight departure delayed because of refueling issues… Fun. *frets* #
  • My iphone does not work here. No internet! Scary! #
  • Plane landed in san francisco. #
  • Walking across the golden gate bridge wi twitpic.com/2r8so4 #
  • Motel 6 plugs. twitpic.com/2ratee #
  • I'm at Motel 6 (111 Mitchell Avenue, South San Francisco): #
  • Having fun in the server room. All ur wiki r belong 2 me. (@ Wikimedia Foundation) 4sq.com/8bSfZo #
  • My internet access is limited while I am in SanFran at WMF so I'm not checking / updating. If need me, e-mail me. :) #
  • I'm at Wikimedia Foundation (149 New Montgomery, San Francisco): #
  • Photo at Wikimedia Foundation gowal.la/c/2zatK?139 #
  • I'm at Wikimedia Foundation (149 New Montgomery, San Francisco): #

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-09-19

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 19 September, 2010
  • Most popular Australian athletes, clubs, leagues and sport organizations on Twitter : bit.ly/cAG7kS #afl #nrl #nbl #aleague #
  • I just ousted Flo T. as the mayor of University Of Canberra Library on @foursquare! 4sq.com/aQU5Lb #
  • I just became the mayor of University of Caberra, Building 9 on @foursquare! 4sq.com/9bkJ4Y #
  • More shopping carts. … I should make a coffee table book. twitpic.com/2nxg8x #
  • Another shopping trolley… twitpic.com/2nysdi #
  • I'm getting bossy via e-mail. By that I mean telling them they were right and I was not so right so go fix that. #
  • Rethinking my dissertation topic. This causes me to be very stressed out. Thinking of switching leagues and doing a case study. :/ #
  • Move to Australia. Can't escape Oprah. She's coming here. #
  • Carts/trolleys. twitpic.com/2o7oik #
  • My television is an Oprah free zone. No no and no. I get it. Australians love $$$Oprah$$$. I love what she's done for Chicago too. #
  • Trying to improve my list of Australian sport clubs, leagues, organizations, athletes. Will never be complete but found 15 more. #
  • Which AFL team do Canberrans support in the Grand Final? bit.ly/cGNZHd #afl #gosaints #gocats #godogs #gopies #
  • Why does it feel like that by the time I leave next week, the AUD and USD will be equal? This is really scary. #
  • Canberra and the Raiders on Twitter and Facebook : bit.ly/drGcKx #nrl #goraiders #
  • Wrote 3,000 words between 7am and 4:30pm. I need a nap now. Or maybe pizza. mmm. pizza. #
  • I love Piled Higher and Deeper: bit.ly/9QI3yl Had one of those moments recently. #
  • Most popular Australian athletes, clubs, leagues and sport organizations on Twitter (version 2) : bit.ly/cfzEvk #
  • My collection of Australian sport books. twitpic.com/2osbmg #
  • I just ousted Christian as the mayor of Angus & Robertson on @foursquare! 4sq.com/9q0hjG #
  • Facebook's Twitter directory has a severe American bias. This is annoying. #
  • Watched Survivor. Few moments of squee: OMG! IT IS JIMMY JOHNSON! Australian friend was "Who?" I love Survivor. :D #
  • Bathroom writing at civic centre. twitpic.com/2p6c7y #
  • Rode my bike 50 KM today. Ouchies. Don't want to do that again any time soon. Did get bike bags. Yay! #
  • ACT government ranger people called about my swooping magpie report. Good. I hate them. #
  • Information on bulk loading a wiki: bit.ly/bADfqd #

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-09-12

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 12 September, 2010
  • Twitter: @NRL followers vs. @AFL followers: bit.ly/aYHkzA #
  • I just became the mayor of UCNISS on @foursquare! 4sq.com/aBe9pE #
  • Confusing world of Aussie sport merchandise: yes to Duke, no to Canberra Raiders… twitpic.com/2lp4x1 #
  • Twitter: @NRL followers vs. @AFL followers : bit.ly/aYHkzA #
  • I'm in sport studies. Some one must be able to inflate a football. Will find out tomorrow. #
  • I'm in sport studies. Some one must be able to inflate a football. Will find out tomorrow. #
  • Another spam follower: @interloperinc . When following 42000, you don't need to follow more. #
  • Uni. Aus. guy on ABC24: Saying Aussie unis rock because international students pay lots of revenues? It makes Aussie unis seem SUCK. #
  • Uni. Aus. guy on ABC24: International students should not be seen as commodity. Misplaced goals: WE WANTS MONEY is not YAY! EDUCATION! #
  • I love @TimBull. :D Very helpful with Twitter stuff. :D Highly recommend his site: bit.ly/9dYrVc #
  • It does not sound right when an Aussie imitates a Canadian by saying "Aye." #
  • Productive day: wrote 800 words on my dissertation. Good times. #
  • I have more free time in SFO than I thought. Win! :D #
  • I meant to do writing today. It just didn't happen. #
  • The Top News Story on WIN Canberra? A warning that magpie swooping season has begun. Oh Canberra… I don't know what to say. #
  • I think I am going through sport culture shock. It would explain my current attitude problems… #
  • Sport culture shock: America vs. Australia : bit.ly/cDYl8Y #
  • The trick in life is to turn existential angst over social media into something productive. Like getting closer to your dream job. #
  • Support #teamgws in Canberra: youtu.be/_o0a-CYkoxQ #
  • Canberra people: What is the easiest non-car way to get from Gungahlin to Wanniassa? Bike says 30km each way and eek! #
  • RT @ someone "Researching IT in Education: Theory, Practice and Future Directions" amzn.to/9gWV7y #
  • Who is more sport mad (re: professional sport)? Americans or Aussies? Methodology question : bit.ly/aDCDAE #
  • Rugby Union in the ACT. twitpic.com/2n9djh #
  • More… twitpic.com/2n9eld #
  • Open later on Saturday than Krispy Kreme. Need hot chocolate. (@ Gloria Jeans @ Borders) 4sq.com/b0VzuG #
  • It only took 45 minutes but a family member can now update Facebook from their mobile. Yay! :D #
  • Is it bad to support the All Blacks because I know it will tweak some Australians? (Hint: Some one get me a shirt.) #
  • Saw a dissertation on library website case study with 250 pages of Appendices. It gives me much hope. :D #

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Who is more sport mad (re: professional sport)? Americans or Aussies? Methodology question

Posted by Laura on Saturday, 11 September, 2010

I had a discussion the other day. My observations, based in a small part based on my American issues, is that Americans are more sport bad and are more likely to support their professional sport teams than Australians are. These sort of allegiances (well expressing them) just appear more fundamental to being an American than being an Australian. (This is based on the perception of people wearing sport related apparel for local teams.) The question is: How do you test this? Is there a way to prove that Americans or Aussies are more likely to barrack for their national professional leagues and clubs?

I’m not sure how feasible doing that is and any methodology seems like it could have holes easily torn in it. That said, coming from a place of some one who likes online population studies, the following is my proposed methodology:

  1. Get all the follower location data for people who follow the major national based leagues Twitter accounts in the United States and Australia.  In this case, @AFL, @NRL for Australia and @MLB, @NCAA, @NFL, @NBA for the USA.
  2. Get a follower count of the total Australians following Australia’s leagues.  Get a count of Americans following Australian leagues.  Get a follower count of the total Americans following American leagues.  Get a follower count of the total Australians following American leagues.
  3. Determine the percentage of the total population in Australia following Australian and American leagues.  Determine the percentage of the total population of the USA following Australian and American leagues.
  4. Repeat the above process focusing on local teams: @sydneyswans, @nrl_bulldogs for Sydney. @stkildafc @MelbStormRLC for Melbourne. @NHLBlackhawks , @chicagobulls @whitesox @Cubs for Chicago. @Mets , @YANKEES, @thenyknicks , @nyjets for New York.  Instead of national focus, include only population from the metro area for each city.

Combine the above with a Facebook geography:

  1. Go to https://www.facebook.com/ads/create/ . Get the total population of fans in Australia and the United States for the AFL, A-League, W-League, NRL, WNBL, and ANZ Championship.  Get the total population of fans in Australia and the United States for the NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, NCAA, MLS, WPS and WNBA.
  2. Determine what the percentage of Facebook fans is relative to the total population of the country.
  3. Repeat for local teams in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane in Australia, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles in the United States.  Count only people living with in 50 miles of the city.

The results should show that one country has a greater population expressing interest in professional sport.  This country could them be deemed more sport mad than the other.

Does it sound like a methodology that could show what I think it shows?  Are there any better methods for determining which country is more sport mad?


So I decided to get some of this data for Facebook. When getting interests, I tried to use every relevant interest related to a team. The population data for the metro regions comes from Wikipedia. The population data for the country comes from Google. Analysis later. Early observation: Australia as a whole more dedicated to leagues. Americans are more dedicated to local club support.

League/Team Based in Country/City Fans Country/Metro population % fans Country/Metro population on Facebook % fans
AFL Australia Australia 261,580 21,431,800 1.221% 9,621,400 2.719%
AFL Australia United States 4,720 307,006,550 0.002% 133,925,380 0.004%
NBA United States Australia 5,040 21,431,800 0.024% 9,621,400 0.052%
NBA United States United States 573,340 307,006,550 0.187% 133,925,380 0.428%
NFL United States Australia 3,860 21,431,800 0.018% 9,621,400 0.040%
NFL United States United States 438,020 307,006,550 0.143% 133,925,380 0.327%
NRL Australia Australia 71,100 21,431,800 0.332% 9,621,400 0.739%
NRL Australia United States 940 307,006,550 0.000% 133,925,380 0.001%
WNBA United States Australia 20 21,431,800 0.000% 9,621,400 0.000%
WNBA United States United States 3,740 307,006,550 0.001% 133,925,380 0.003%
A-League Australia Australia 3,900 21,431,800 0.018% 9,621,400 0.041%
A-League Australia United States 100 307,006,550 0.000% 133,925,380 0.000%
NHL United States Australia 4,920 21,431,800 0.023% 9,621,400 0.051%
NHL United States United States 447,000 307,006,550 0.146% 133,925,380 0.334%
NCAA United States Australia 320 21,431,800 0.001% 9,621,400 0.003%
NCAA United States United States 254,560 307,006,550 0.083% 133,925,380 0.190%
ANZ Championship Australia Australia 1,480 21,431,800 0.007% 9,621,400 0.015%
ANZ Championship Australia United States 20 307,006,550 0.000% 133,925,380 0.000%
WPS United States Australia 18,100 21,431,800 0.084% 9,621,400 0.188%
WPS United States United States 160 307,006,550 0.000% 133,925,380 0.000%
W-League Australia Australia 1,340 21,431,800 0.006% 9,621,400 0.014%
W-League Australia United States 60 307,006,550 0.000% 133,925,380 0.000%
Chicago Cubs Chicago Chicago 819,260 9,569,624 8.561% 5,915,800 13.849%
Chicago Bears Chicago Chicago 825,400 9,569,624 8.625% 5,915,800 13.952%
Chicago Bulls Chicago Chicago 373,640 9,569,624 3.904% 5,915,800 6.316%
Chicago Blackhawls Chicago Chicago 360,940 9,569,624 3.772% 5,915,800 6.101%
Chicago White Sox Chicago Chicago 211,160 9,569,624 2.207% 5,915,800 3.569%
Chicago Fire Chicago Chicago 23,900 9,569,624 0.250% 5,915,800 0.404%
Chicago Bandits Chicago Chicago 1,140 9,569,624 0.012% 5,915,800 0.019%
Brisbane Broncos Brisbane Brisbane 41,160 2,004,262 2.054% 1,422,400 2.894%
Brisbane Lions Brisbane Brisbane 6,680 2,004,262 0.333% 1,422,400 0.470%
Queensland Maroons Brisbane Brisbane 68,900 2,004,262 3.438% 1,422,400 4.844%
Queensland Reds Brisbane Brisbane 4,880 2,004,262 0.243% 1,422,400 0.343%
Queensland Roar Brisbane Brisbane 2,480 2,004,262 0.124% 1,422,400 0.174%

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Sport culture shock: America vs. Australia

Posted by Laura on Friday, 10 September, 2010
Footlocker Belconnen: This isn't the USA

This is the Footlocker in Westfield Belconnen. Notice the lack of Australian sport team merchandise and the presence of American sport merchandise.

I’m embarrassed to admit it but I think, after four and a half months in Australia, I’ve finally developed a bit of sport culture shock.   Before hand, I could enjoy the differences between American and Australian sport.  I could discuss these differences with out getting irritated.  At the moment?  Not so much.  This particular area of spot is where I have the biggest problems.  Food?  Driving?  Politics? The educational system?  Public transport?  Newspapers? The price of certain things in shops?  The quality of shopping?  I can deal with these and appreciate/live with the differences with out thinking the US is superior. Sport is my problem.

I feel the need to blog about this issue as I need to vent and better learn about my own problems.

A lot of my issues with Australian professional sport revolve around sport related clothing.  Part of the fabric of my life in the Chicago area was going to the mall, going to the shops, going to the park, going to the city and seeing people wearing jumpers and t-shirts and jackets and hats for local sport teams.  Yes, there might be clothing worn for non-local teams but the local teams always dominated.  About 2/3rds of the time, the clothing related to the sport in season.   In Canberra (and to a degree Melbourne and Cairns though I haven’t spent as much time there), I don’t see sport related clothing as much.  When I do see it, I often don’t see it for local teams like the Raiders, the WNBL teams, the local footy (all codes) teams.  I sometimes see AFL shirts and NRL shirts.  I most often see Brumbies shirts.  (The Brumbies aren’t playing right now.)  When I do see baseball hats, they often are for American MLB teams. The AFL grand final is coming up soon and I’m not seeing any increase in club support on the streets of Canberra.  I like that sort of support and passion.  I like to know that people feel proud of their teams enough to wear a shirt.  I love to know that people support Chicago teams, even if they suck.  It just reaffirms our local identity.  I like wearing a Cubs shirt on the train coming back from a Cubs game and having the conductor ask me about a game.

Related to clothing, not since the World Cup have I seen any shops encouraging their staff to wear gear to support their club.  In Chicago, during the NFL season when the Bears play the Packers, a lot of stores (well, my local grocery stores) encourage their staff to wear a jersey for their team.  As a customer, I love this as I can take the piss out of a Packers fan and have fun conversations.  This also feels like it reaffirms our identity as midwesterners and specifically, as Chicagoans (in the greater regional sense).  It makes the area feel less like generic suburbia.

Even more with clothing, I like the fact that in the Chicago area, I can go into a grocery store and buy a Cubs shirt or a Bears shirt or a Blackhawks shirt or a Bulls shirt.  (It all depends on the season and performance.)  I like the fact that there are different pricing tiers so that as some one with no money can buy merchandise.  I like knowing I have the option to spend more.  I like the fact that I can think of ten different places with in two miles of my house at home where I can buy some professional sport related merchandise.  (All important when you’re going to a Sox game and you need a Sox shirt because you’re a Cubs fan.)  I like the fact that in Chicago, almost any tourist related shop you go into will have something related to some professional sport club from the area.  In Gunghalin in the ACT?  I can think of one shop where I can buy NRL  gear (for one team).  There don’t appear to be any places to get AFL gear, ANZ Championship kits, A-League merchandise, NBL or WNBL stuff.  I can think of one place where I can get maybe NBL stuff, and ANZ Championship stuff. I can think of about ten places total in Belconnen and Civic and buy the airport where I can get NRL, AFL and A-League gear.  I can think of maybe one place in those areas where I could get NBL gear.  (I can think of more places to get NBA kits.)  I can’t think of anywhere I can find kits for the Wallaroos or Hockeyroos. Finding merchandise is hard.  When I do find it, it is often at a price point I can’t afford.

Beyond this, when I do wear my limited Australian professional sport clothing out, I often feel like a giant advertisement.  The Raiders are playing this weekend in playoffs for the championship of the NRL.  I don’t see many Raiders shirts.  (Or other NRL team shirts.) (I see more Brumbies gear and that’s still at a low level.)  So when I’m in my loud green Raiders shirt, I feel like I’m sticking out in a way that I just wouldn’t stick out in the US.

I have some issues with that aren’t related to clothing.  One of them is what feels like love of the club you barrack for.  I went to Melbourne this winter.  I got off my train and was trying to catch a tram to St. Kilda right after the game had let out.  If this had been the Chicago area, I would have known immediately who had won.  In Melbourne?  Based on fan reaction of getting out of the stadium?  I had no clue.  Zip.  Zilch.  Nada.  None.  For me, half the fun of going to the game is the utter dejection or utter elation of how your team did.  Random strangers who see you kitted up will ask you how your team did.  You’ll hear people talking about the club and their performance all over.  Making it better, I can be riding a train or sitting in a fast food restaurant and people generally don’t have a problem with me butting in on their sort conversation to give my own two sense.  I love it as it adds to a sense of community identity.  It makes me feel like I’m part of something greater.  It is a way of meeting new people.  I love following sport and feeling that way.

Australia’s major sport seasons appear to have ended for the summer.  I know of a few Australians who have teams who are out of it for the AFL or NRL.  They’ve now moved on to barracking for American sport teams in the NFL.  I just… the loyalties there boggle my mind and the lack of ways of expressing that loyalty in Australia also annoy.  I want to ask at times: Don’t you have Australian sport you (and I) can support?  Don’t you care about the finals of those Aussie leagues to wait until the finals are over before moving on?  And all of that feels really rude and wrong to think… but when my team in Chicago sucks and the time is to move on, I move on to another local team.

I’ve a few more issues with sport culture in Australia that are making me cranky.  I just can’t articulate them all.  A lot of my issues boil down to public passion, community support and willingness to express identity as a sport fan.  I’ve read a bit on dealing with culture shock but I’m not entirely certain how to do it here and be a casual sport nut in Australia like I am in the USA.

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-09-05

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 5 September, 2010
  • WMF-mailing list has poster that suggests humanities are less collaboratively oriented.Others have similar experiences with that discipline? #
  • Shopping carts do not belong in trees… twitpic.com/2jj1ar #
  • I just became the mayor of University of Canberra- Building 3 on @foursquare! 4sq.com/bNLmXz #
  • Fun times today with learning how I screwed up. Not all bad as one involves over paying a bill and having a month's phone credit. #
  • If all you do is post from SocialOoomph and don't interact, why are you following others? Anti-social behavior that is. #
  • hm. Location tool missed 960 out of 4,300. Not bad but not good either. #
  • Sydney Swans fans on Twitter : bit.ly/cPfEAg #goswans #afl #
  • Foursquare and gowalla are off by 215km today… #
  • Today's writing so far: Viégas et al. (2007) did a collaboration analysis focusing on Wikipedia. #
  • Frustrated with my @optus dongle. It doesn't want to stay connected @unicanberra #
  • I just became the mayor of Dick Smith Electronics on @foursquare! 4sq.com/925XRM #
  • Yes, you can say American football is boring because often it is. ;) #
  • Looking at @AFL followers by city: Melbourne: 2363. Perth 443. Sydney 397. Adelaide 366. Brisbane 266. Geelong 97. Gold Coast 84. #
  • Number of followers for @afl popularity by state: VIC 3623, NSW 693, WA 685, QLD 558, SA 547, TAS 156, ACT 111, NT 33. #
  • The more I look at Twitter location field and compare it to time zone? The more it seems like there is ZERO conneciton… #
  • I just became the mayor of Wok It Up on @foursquare! 4sq.com/cj5601 #
  • Best place to look for cheap close to last minutes flights from Australia to the USA? #
  • Bridge repair twitpic.com/2kp1x0 #
  • Me: "I want a Geelong jumper!" Friend: "The horizontal stripes would make you look fat." (Can you tell he barracks for St. Kilda?) #
  • Dear Justin Bieber fans: Justin's pants, Beiber's bed, Beiberville are NOT legit locations. … Also, disturbing locations. Just say no. #
  • Americans e-mailing me: I love you all but I sleep at night in Australia. Not awake to respond at times. #
  • I just ousted Sharon V. as the mayor of Borders on @foursquare! 4sq.com/8a2KzE #
  • I just ousted @ndowney77 as the mayor of Baker's Delight on @foursquare! 4sq.com/9J3r0Z #
  • Weird guestbook message: germans are meanies. twitpic.com/2l2a1c #
  • Busy trying to convince @ShakataGaNai that cookies are awesome and to surrender his kitchen. Because I want home made by my dad cookies. #
  • How do I get city, state, country out of Google Maps Geocoder data? When starting with Latitude and Longitude? #
  • I can't figure out how to select that specific line… #
  • "Why are you using excel? Seems inefficient." "Because for most of my datasets, only 100 people. Don't need processing power." #
  • Working on my lit review this morning. I've written about 200 words. Happy. :) #
  • I don't suppose anyone could provide me with Eric and Kathy Podcasts? :( I think that they are blocking them in Australia. :( #
  • Lunch starter. twitpic.com/2ld287 #
  • Friend: Rule hadn't been invoked since Christ played football. Me: Heard Jesus spoke English so make sense he played Aussie rules football. #
  • Of course the site I wants to use is now down. :( #

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Methodology: Draft/Free writing (part 4)

Posted by Laura on Thursday, 2 September, 2010

When I say part 4, what I mean is that this this includes everything you’ve seen in earlier parts… and I’ve just added bits here and there. In this case, I’ve added about 800 words. I’ve managed to complete about seven of the ten sections of my methodology so far. Even though seven sections are done, this is still very much a draft as the grammar has issues, there are organizational issues, there may be incomplete thoughts, etc. A lot of this blog is about showing other people the process of writing a dissertation. As I’m writing about social media and social media moves so fast… posting this in this format feels appropriate. Onwards with my latest…


Methodology

When conducting social media research, there are ten general methods that can be used to gather and analyze data. These are:

  1. Individual case studies for how a business uses social media and the web;
  2. Search and traffic analytics analysis;
  3. Sentiment analysis and reputation management;
  4. Content analysis;
  5. Usability studies;
  6. Interaction and collaboration analysis;
  7. Relationship analysis to try to determine how people interact and to identify key influencers;
  8. Population/demographic studies;
  9. Online target analysis of behavior and psychographics; and
  10. Predictive analysis.

Each of these methods offers insights into various aspects of the web and its population. The type of analysis used is often specific to the purpose of the research, involved blended approaches from traditional analysis types, and different methods are often used in conjunction with each other. These methods often blend quantitative and qualitative analysis. Choosing the correct method of gathering analyzing data can be one of the biggest hurdles for being able to measure ROI and understand how a community works.

This section will provide a brief summary of each type, explain how to conduct this type of research and give examples that used that methodology.

Individual case studies for how a business uses social media and the web (COMPLETE)

Case studies on social media usage are often done to measure the effectiveness of specific actions taken by an organization.

Bronwyn et al. (2005) say case studies “typically examine the interplay of all variables in order to provide as complete an understanding of an event or situation as possible. This type of comprehensive understanding is arrived at through a process known as thick description, which involves an in-depth description of the entity being evaluated, the circumstances under which it is used, the characteristics of the people involved in it, and the nature of the community in which it is located.”

This methodology often incorporates components of all the other methods discussed in this section. The specific methods often depend on the goals of the person or organization conducting the case study.

Vincenzini (2010) did a case study regarding the use of the social media by the NBA in an attempt to define why they have been successful in using it to promote the league. The author used quantitative analysis to measure the size of the community, the volume of content they were viewing on sites like YouTube and the volume of content they were creating on sites like Twitter. The quantitative analysis was synthesized with explanations from NBA employees to explain their practices in the context of their own business decisions as they pertained to social media. This was followed up with an explanation as to what worked and what did not worked and offered advise for others involved with sport and social media to help them leverage their own position.

Case studies are a mixed methodology approach, borrowing from other approaches. The major difference is that the case study focuses on a narrower perspective with the goal of tracking behavioral changes, or in advising others on how an organization changed practices and how those lessons can be applied elsewhere.

Search and traffic analytics analysis (COMPLETE)

Search engine and traffic analytics generally is done internally to determine how to optimize a site in order to increase the amount of visitors a site gets and the total number of pages that they view. This method involves identifying how people arrive at a specific site and the pages they visit while at the site. Traffic analytics analysis often includes six different components: Search engine visitors, paid search advertisements, pay per click, organic traffic, direct traffic and internal site traffic.

Ramos and Cota (2009) define traffic analytics as “Tools that analyze and compare customer activity in order to make business decisions and increase sales. Analytics tools can report the number of conversions, the keywords that brought conversions, the sites that sent converting traffic, conversion by campaign, and so on.”

There are a number of different methods and tools that allow for this type of analysis. Early in the history of the Internet, one of the most popular tools and methods involved analyzing web server log files. (Jansen 2009) Another popular early method of analysis was page tagging, which involved embedding an invisible image on a page, which, when the image is triggered, “triggers JavaScript to send information about the page and the user back to a remote server.” (Jansen 2009) These earlier tools have advanced a bit and now include tools like Quantcast and Google Analytics. Kaushik (2010) recommends Google Analytics, a free tool that involves putting a bit of code on all pages of a site. Kaushik (2010) points out that various types of traffic analysis can be done using the various tools provided by Google Analytics. The author claims that Google Analytics allows you to break the analysis down into “three important pieces: campaign response, website behavior, and business outcomes.” (Kaushik 2010)

Fang (2007) completed a case study at the Rutgers-Newark Law Library in order to track library website usage, track visitor behavior and determine how to improve the website to better serve users. Earlier work done by the library had involved surveys handed out to patrons, analysis of log files, and the use of counters. (Fang 2007) The author changed methods because of some inherent flaws in using those methods to analyze website needs. They used Google Analytics in order to track user activity on the library’s website. The library “found out how many users were accurately following the path we had designed to reach a target page.” (Fang 2007) This sort of path following navigation was one of the goals they had when they designed their site. They also found out that “Visitor Segmentation showed that 83% of visitors were coming from the United States. About 50% of U.S. visitors were from New Jersey, and 76% of these were from Belleville and Newark. These results matched our predictions for patrons’ geographical patterns.” (Fang 2007) The results of this analysis enabled the library to make changes to improve their website.

This type of methodology lends itself more to a case study approach and often requires the consent of the website involved in order to get private logs. It can be used in conjunction with other methods, but should be used in a more targeted analysis of highly specific research areas.

Sentiment analysis and reputation management (COMPLETE)

Sentiment analysis involves identifying content related to a topic and identifying the emotion connected to that content. In a sport context, sentiment analysis could involve determining if newspapers are providing positive or negative coverage of a team. In a social media context, sentiment analysis would involve determining attitudes being expressed on Twitter in individual tweets. Reputation management goes one further: After sentiment has been determined, a decision needs to be made on if and how negative and positive sentiment content should be responded to. Sentiment analysis is passive analysis where non-stakeholders can conduct analysis. Reputation management is active analysis that is primarily conducted by stakeholders as part of on going activities to improve a brand, be it personal or corporate.

While sentiment analysis and reputation management are similar in their desire to monitor a response to a situation, the tools available vary differently for each type. There a variety of different tools for sentiment analysis. One of the tools for conducting sentiment analysis are freely available lists of words “that evoke positive or negative associations.” (Wanner et al. 2009) Sterne (2010) suggests that content being ReTweeted on Twitter can be seen as a tool to measure positive sentiment. Sterne (2010) suggests that the ratio of follows/followers is not an effective tool for measuring sentiment on Twitter. Reputation management tools include Trackur. It allows you to “set up searchers and the system automatically monitors the Web for key words that appear on news sites, blogs, and other social media.” (Weber 2009)

Wanner et al. (2009) did a sentiment analysis of RSS feeds that focused on the 2008 United States presidential elections. They selected 50 feeds connected to the elections and collected updates to these feeds every 30 minutes for one-month starting 9 October 2008. For each item they collected off the feeds, they also recorded the date, title, description and feed id. (Wanner et al. 2009) After that, they eliminated all noise, which mostly consisted of non-content like URLS. (Wanner et al. 2009) The next step was to filter out all items that did not contain one of the following terms: “Obama”, “McCain”, “Biden”, “Palin”, “Democrat” and “Republican”. (Wanner et al. 2009) Sentiment was then analyzed using freely available lists “that evoke positive or negative associations.” (Wanner et al. 2009) The results were then visualized. Five events that happened during this period were chosen for a more detailed visual examination. They found that the news regarding possible abuse of power by Sarah Palin in Alaska resulted in many negative posts. They also found that the debates resulted in low sentiment scores for both candidates as the candidates attacked each other. The authors concluded that the visual tool they created would be useful for monitoring public debates.

This methodology can overlap with influencer identification (Weber 2009) as part of reputation management involves determining which people are worth responding to. It can also overlap with psychographics. Despite the obvious overlaps, this type of research often appears independently and not as part of a larger study.

Content analysis,

Content analysis involves looking at the individual components of something larger and analyzing it. In a social media context, the content could be comments on a Facebook fanpage, or all the tweets made by a person or group.

With content analysis, the researcher views data as “data as representation not of physical events but of texts, images and expressions that are created to be seen, read, interpreted, and acted on for their meanings, and therefore be analyzed with such uses in mind.” (Krippendorff 2007) Krippendorff (2007) defines the basic methodology used in content analysis as unitizing, sampling, recording, reducing, inferring, and narrating.

Usability studies,

According to Sweeney, Dorey and MacLellan (2006), one of the purposes of a usability study is “point out specific usability problems with your Web site interface in line with how well your Web site speaks to your audience and their goals.”

Usability studies can be done in conjunction with traffic analysis and search analytics as the purposes are often similar: Improve the user experience and try to get users to complete certain tasks.

Interaction and collaboration analysis,

Viégas et al. (2007) did a collaboration analysis focusing on Wikipedia. The purpose of their work was to examine historical editing patterns and how editing practices have evolved over time. They built on work done by Viégas, Wattenberg and Dave in 2003. The methodology they used involved getting the editing history of articles across several different Wikipedia namespaces. The history of the articles was then examined using several visualization tools, metrics and methods depending on the established cultural practices for that namespace. One tool they used was a history flow visualization application. A method they used was the manual classification of “all user posts in a purposeful sample”. (Viégas et al., 2007) Metrics they used included count of horizontal rules, signed user names, new indentations levels, votes in polls and total “references to internal Wikipedia resources.” (Viégas et al., 2007) These tools, metrics and methods allowed them to examine how collaboration and interaction had changed over time.

Relationship analysis (COMPLETE)

Relationship analysis involves examining the relationships between users on a social network, message board or mailing list. The goal is to identify cliques of different sizes or people who are particularly influential in a particular group online. This type of analysis is important to many brands including Starbucks (Plimsoll, 2010). The purpose of relationship analysis is to identify key influencers and social who influencers who are or who have the potential to be brand evangelists. (Plimsoll, 2010)

Lord and Singh (2010) define social media influence marketing as being “about recognizing, accounting and tapping into the fact that as your potential consumer makes a purchasing decision, he or she is being influenced by different circles of people through conversations with them, both online and off.”

The methodology for influence identification is not clearly spelled out as identifying influencers can be heavily dependent on the network being examined and how the community on a specific site functions. As a result, social media marketers suggest an array of tools like Twitalyzer that can be used to help determine your own influence. (Ankeny 2009) Twitalyzer’s Peterson and Katz (2010) explain their site-specific method of determining influence as including the following variables: Engagement level, total followers, total following, hashtags cited, lists included on, frequency of updates, references by others, references of others, times content is retweeted, urls cited and a number of other variables. Sterne (2010) suggests using WeFollow.com to find people who use topic specific #hashtags on Twitter. The people who tweet the most about a topic are likely to be influencers in that others looking for tweets around a topic are likely to read them. In a wider web context, Sterne (2010) suggests using Technorati to identify bloggers who have clout and influence around a certain topic.

This type of research can be viewed as a fundamental component to sentiment analysis; social media marketing companies like Razorfish often package the two together. (Lord & Singh, 2010)

Population /Demographic studies (COMPLETE)

Population studies involve defining the demographic characteristics of a community. In a population study, the goal is also to define the limits and size of the community that is being studied. Because of the complexity in defining the boundaries of a population and in sampling the whole of it, this type of research is rarely done in terms of social media.

Daugherty and Kammeyer (1995) define a population study as the assembling “of numerical data on the sizes of populations.” This sort of data is defined by the authors as “descriptive demographic statistics.” Daugherty and Kammeyer (1995) say “population numbers are always changing, so even if they are accurate when gathered they are soon out of date and inaccurate.” Daugherty and Kammeyer (1995) say the basic purpose of conducting a demographic study “is to explain or predict changes or variations in the population variables or characteristics.” Given the definition of a population study, the methodology involves counting all members of a select population.

The most famous example of a population study is the census. In the United States, this is done every ten years. According to the U.S. Census Bureau (n.d), the goal of the 2010 US census is ” to count all U.S. residents—citizens and non-citizens alike.” This is done by sending all citizens a ten-question questionnaire, requiring that people complete it by law and having a census taker follow up for all households did not return completed questionnaires. (U.S. Census Bureau, n.d.) The results are then calculated and are used by the government to make decisions.

This type of research often stands on its own. The results will often be utilized for marketing purposes in conducting other research, such as psychographics, to make that that sampling contains representative populations.

Online target analysis of behavior and psychographics (COMPLETE)

Online targeting of and marketing towards a specific audience because of their demographic characteristics is extremely common on the Internet. Psychographics is a term that includes targeting towards a specific demographic group except it includes the offline component.

Sutherland and Canwell (2004) define psychographics as “market research and market segmentation technique used to measure lifestyles and to develop lifestyle classifications.” (p. 247) Nicolas (2009) defines online behaviorial analysis as a series of steps: Collecting user data across several sites, organizing information about users based on the sites they visit and their behavior on those sites, “infer demographics and interest data”, and classifying new users based on the collected data in order to deliver relevant ads and content based their demographic profiles. Kinney, McDaniel, and DeGaris (2008) define psychographics as attitude towards something such as a brand or involvement with an organization.

Given the methodology involved, much of this type of research involves action research in that it is done in a specific content, based on internal models to address specific situations.

An example of this type of research was done by Kinney, McDaniel, and DeGaris (2008) who investigated the demographic characteristics of NASCAR fans and their attitudes towards NASCAR, its sponsors and sponsor involvement with NASCAR. The research found that age, gender and education were all important variables in determining sponsor recall: Younger, more educated males had the best brand recall amongst NASCAR fans.

This type of research can be viewed as a subcomponent of a population study in that demographic information is sought about the population. In an online context, it often works in conjunction with search and traffic analytics analysis, content analysis, and interaction and collaboration analysis.

Predictive analysis (COMPLETE)

A search on 13 July 2010 on SPORTDiscus had three results for “predictive analysis.” A search on the same date on Scopus had 605 results, 275 of which were in engineering, 132 in computer science and 102 in medicine. Predictive analysis is probably one of the least used analysis methods, especially in social media and fandom.

What is predictive analysis? At its simplest, it is identifying a future event or events, monitoring selection actions that precede the event and seeing if those events can be used to predict the outcome of similar events in the future. If a predictive value is found, an organization can monitor behaviors to help make more informed decisions.

An example of this type of research is “Predicting the Future With Social Media” by Asur and Huberman (2010). Their goal was to determine if tweet volume and sentiment on Twitter prior to a movie being released could be used to predict how well a movie performs at the box office. Their methodology involved identifying movie wider release dates that took place on a Friday, creating a list of keyword searches related to those movies, and using the Twitter API to collect all tweets and aggregate date that mention those keywords over a three month time period. The authors then compared the tweet volume to box office performance. They concluded that social media “can be used to build a powerful model for predicting movie box-office revenue.” (Asur & Huberman, 2010)

This type of research can be used in conjunction with other methods. It can be used along side a population study to see if certain actions will result in demographic changes.
Ankeny, J. (2009). HOW TWITTER IS REVOLUTIONIZING BUSINESS. Entrepreneur, 37(12), 26-32. Retrieved from Business Source Premier database.

Asur, S., & Huberman, B. A. (2010). Predicting the Future With Social Media. Social Computing Lab. Retrieved from http://www.hpl.hp.com/research/scl/papers/socialmedia/socialmedia.pdf

Bronwyn, B., Dawson, P., Devine, K., Hannum, C., Hill, S., Leydens, J., Matuskevich, D. Traver, C, and Palmquist, M. (2005). Case Studies. Writing@CSU. Colorado State University Department of English. Retrieved August 26, 2010 from http://writing.colostate.edu/guides/research/casestudy/.

Daugherty, H. G., & Kammeyer, K. C. W. (1995). An introduction to population. New York: Guilford Press.

Fang, W. (2007), Using Google Analytics for improving library website content and design: A case study. Library Philosophy and Practice 2007 (June), LPP Special Issue on Libraries and Google. Retrieved September 2, 2010 from http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.84.5924&rep=rep1&type=pdf

Jansen, B. J. (2009). Understanding user-Web interactions via Web analytics. San Rafael, Calif.: Morgan & Claypool Publishers.

Kaushik, A. (2010). Web analytics 2.0: The art of online accountability & science of customer centricity. Hoboken, N.J: Wiley.

Kinney, L., McDaniel, S., & DeGaris, L. (2008). Demographic and psychographic variables predicting NASCAR sponsor brand recall. International Journal of Sports Marketing & Sponsorship, 9(3), 169-179. Retrieved from SPORTDiscus with Full Text database.

Krippendorff, K. (2007). Content analysis: An introduction to its methodology. Thousand Oaks, Calif.

Lord, B., & Singh, S. (2010). Fluent: The Razorfish Social Influence Marketing Report. Razorfish. Retrieved August 25, 2010, from http://fluent.razorfish.com/publication/?m=6540&l=1

Nicolas, P. (2009, December 17). “Online audience behavior analysis and targeting.” Patrick Nicolas Official Home Page. Retrieved August 1, 2010, from http://www.pnexpert.com/Analytics.html

Peterson, E., & Katz, J. (2010). Twitalyzer Help and Company Information | Twitalyzer: Serious Analytics for Social Media and Social CRM. Twitalyzer. Retrieved August 25, 2010, from http://www.twitalyzer.com/help.asp

Plimsoll, S. (2010). Find and target customers in the social media maze. Marketing (00253650), 10-11. Retrieved from Business Source Premier database.

Ramos, A., & Cota, S. (2009). Search engine marketing. New York: McGraw-Hill.

Sterne, J. (2010). Social media metrics: How to measure and optimize your marketing investment. Hoboken, N.J: John Wiley.

Sutherland, J., & Canwell, D. (204). Key Concepts in Marketing. Palgrave Key Concepts. Hampshire, England: Palgrave MacMillan.

Sweeney, S., Dorey, E., & MacLellan, A. (2006). 3G marketing on the internet: Third generation internet marketing strategies for online success. Gulf Breeze, FL: Maximum Press.

Viégas, F. B., Wattenberg, M., Kriss, J., & van Ham, F. (2007). Talk Before You Type: Coordination in Wikipedia. Proceedings of the 40th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Big Island, Hawaii. Retrieved from http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.84.6907&rep=rep1&type=pdf

Vincenzini, A. (2010, July 14). A Case Study: The NBA’s Social Media Strategy & Tactics. Retrieved August 26, 2010, from http://www.slideshare.net/AdamVincenzini/the-nba-and-social-media-a-case-study

U.S. Census Bureau. (n.d.). How We Count America – 2010 Census. U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved August 28, 2010, from http://2010.census.gov/2010census/how/how-we-count.php

Wanner, F., Rohrdantz, C., Mansmann, F., Oelke, D. and Keim, D., Visual Sentiment Analysis of RSS News Feeds Featuring the US Presidential Election in 2008. in Workshop on Visual Interfaces to the Social and Semantic Web, (2009).

Weber, L. (2009). Sticks and Stones: How Digital Business Reputations Are Created over Time and Lost in a Click. John Wiley & Sons Inc.

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-08-29

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 29 August, 2010
  • In the past 6 hours, I have developed an inferiority complex and huge doubts regarding my research. :( Not cool! #
  • There are around 2,140 IP address edits to the Australian Football League article on Wikipedia… #
  • Friend is building me a Twitter tool to datamine follower location. At moment, only gets 100 most recent. #
  • Location of recent Essendon followers on Twitter : bit.ly/dp0qoW #
  • Some #afl related Tweet stats that give a much better picture than I can: bit.ly/d1zHbK #
  • Done playing around with Twapperkeeper.com bit.ly/bIOrUt. Should have the AFL covered well for final week… #
  • Is there a list of user input locations to City, State, Country or Geocode? #
  • It looks like more posts are tagged #nrl than #afl . Does this make sense? #
  • Refined Twitter thing. Got follow info half of St. Kilda's followers. Maybe look at later today. #
  • A picture of St. Kilda followers on Twitter : bit.ly/aubwID #gosaints #afl #
  • Running an iteration of the my follower information for @richmond_FC . Should have some analysis tomorrow. Only have half the set at mo. #
  • The average @richmond_fc follower follows 432 people and is followed by 537 people… #
  • That follow thing is because @richmond_FC has one person following more than 100,000. @stkildafc has 15. #
  • 16% of all posts tagged #AFL are posted using TwitterFeed: bit.ly/bmI88a #
  • 16% of all posts tagged #AFL are posted using TwitterFeed: bit.ly/bmI88a #
  • Photo: Rainbow! — at University Of Canberra gowal.la/c/2neVG?139 #
  • Melbourne Storm followers on Twitter : bit.ly/dzLarc #nrl #
  • Melbourne Storm followers on Twitter : bit.ly/dzLarc #nrl #
  • ARG! Overwrote my Storm post. :( #
  • Richmond Tigers followers on Twitter : bit.ly/ajtECp #afl #
  • Richmond Tigers followers on Twitter : bit.ly/ajtECp #afl #
  • Rainbow in Canberra twitpic.com/2i9aga #
  • Ah ha! Managed to retrieve my lost Melbourne Storm post… and it is back at bit.ly/dzLarc #
  • I just became the mayor of Penneys Paper Shop on @foursquare! 4sq.com/b3PL4D #
  • Is there any site that provides geocordinate boundaries for Australian cities? #
  • Working on methodology section of my dissertation… bit.ly/bJ5GTu The boring but interesting bits. :) Needs lots of work. #
  • Location, location, location: Why can't Twitter users standardize their locations? bit.ly/b8pfZH #geolocation #geocoding #geography #
  • Boo: Sorry for the bad news, but Minnie has just ousted you as mayor of Westfield Belconnen! bit.ly/bAWRmA #
  • #thatcampcbr (@ University Of Canberra, Building 7) 4sq.com/bhZoZo #
  • Building 7 and 9 are not the sAme… Reading fail this morning… #
  • Photo: #ThatCampCBR — at ThatCamp Canberra gowal.la/c/2o4cL?139 #
  • I just earned the 120 Film Pin on @gowalla! gowal.la/r/24XBn #
  • Photo: #thatcamp — at ThatCamp Canberra gowal.la/c/2o4cL?139 #
  • Highly technical jargon in mixed skill set room is intimidating. :/ hate feeling stupid… Wrong answer is to bail but did. #
  • In my collection of Oz sport shirts, I now have a West Coast Eagles shirt. It is my first AFL shirt. :D #wce #afl #
  • Wrote 403 words on my dissertation today. I feel accomplished. :D #
  • Photo: — at Koko Black Chocolate gowal.la/c/2oywq?139 #
  • I just became the mayor of On Ya Bike on @foursquare! 4sq.com/aB9RXr #
  • I got a new bike! :D It is a mountain bike and my fear of hitting pebbles and falling off the bike has gone way down! #
  • Ozzie birds hate all whites… Or at least 1 pooped on me while I wore my all whites shirt on my new bike… #
  • I just became the mayor of Canberra Nature Park Crace Nature Reserve on @foursquare! 4sq.com/9vW44v #
  • Canberra bridge accident being cleared… twitpic.com/2j92os #

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