Social Media vs Cancer #Beatcancer
by admin on October 16, 2009
in Blog, Social Media
Click here to join me!
It is another day and Social media has another target in its sights. Yesterday it was climate change, today, it is the big ‘C’. Beatcancereverywhere.com helps Twitterers everywhere raise money (by posting #beatcancer) and getting 1 cent for charity for everyone counted.
So go on and add #beatcancer to all your posts today.
Blog Action Day ’09
by admin on October 15, 2009
in Blog, Social Media
Blog Action Day is an annual event that unites the world’s bloggers in posting about the same issue on the same day. Our aim is to raise awareness and trigger a global discussion.
First and last, the purpose of Blog Action Day is to create a discussion. We ask bloggers to take a single day out of their schedule and focus it on an important issue.
By doing so on the same day, the blogging community effectively changes the conversation on the web and focuses audiences around the globe on that issue.
Out of this discussion naturally flow ideas, advice, plans, and action. In 2007 on the theme of the Environment, we saw bloggers running environmental experiments, detailing innovative ideas on creating sustainable practices, and focusing their audience’s attention on organizations and companies promoting green agendas. In 2008 we covered the theme of Poverty, and similarly focused the blogging community’s energies around discussing the wide breadth of the issue from many perspectives and identifying innovative and unexpected solutions. This year we aim to do the same for Climate Change, an issue that threatens us all.
From the smallest online journals to huge online magazines, Blog Action Day is about mass participation. Anyone is free to join in on Blog Action Day and there is no limit on the number of posts, the type of posts or the direction of thoughts and opinions.
Visit Blog Action Day and get involved.
**** UPDATE ****
Hey bloggers,
You did it!
Yesterday you and bloggers in 155 countries across six continents wrote about a single issue that impacts us all, and turned Blog Action Day 2009 into one of the largest social change events ever held on the web.
Your participation helped change the conversation and showed the power of the web to connect people across the world who despite their varied backgrounds have one shared desire: to make a difference. According to blogpulse, we increased the number of posts about climate change on a given day by 500%, and CNN wrote a great article covering the excitement and diversity of today’s event across the web and around the world.
A full recap is up on our blog, and here are some highlights:
We hit 31,000 total trackable blog posts, and our current estimate is that together we reached at least 17.9 million people yesterday. We just exceeded 13,000 registered bloggers on the site and are working to get all of you who posted but haven’t yet registered into the final count.
We had at least three major world governments as active participants in this year’s event. United Kingdom Prime Minister Gordon BrownForeign Minister David Milliband and many others from the UK stationed around the world. The PSOE governing party of Spain hosted a bloggers event focused on climate change and transformed their website for the day to promote Blog Action Day. And late in the day, President Barack Obama’s White House blog joined in become part of the global movement of bloggers shaking the web. posted the first Blog Action Day entry in Britain at the stroke of midnight on the 15th, which was followed by
Of course, well-known bloggers were a big presence yesterday as well:
- The Official Google Blog gave a green tour of the company’s campus;
- Mashable asked what you’re doing to reverse climate change;
- The Unofficial Apple Weblog suggested “Five apps to help save the world”;
- Treehugger gave us two simple things that could, by themselves, stop climate change;
- Global Voices posted a roundup of bloggers from around the world writing in many languages;
- Gadling spent the whole day posting about green travel;
- BlogHer covered the road to the next international climate negotations in Copehagen.
There are many more, and we encourage you to check out the Featured Posts on the blogactionday.org homepage for a longer list of some of the world’s largest blogs.
Many of our nonprofit partners, leading organizations from around the world, were also actively involved in making the event a success:
- TckTckTck released a beautiful and touching new video;
- Greenpeace bloggers from around the world joined in;
- World Wildlife Fund featured Blog Action Day on their international climate blog;
- Oxfam helped emphasize the human side of the climate crisis;
- 1Sky wrote about the front lines of political activism in the US;
- The Nature Conservancy helped us understand the science of climate change;
- NRDC’s Switchboard bloggers wrote informative posts all day;
- Consequence wrote a whole series of posts on youth climate leadership.
You should all feel proud of this remarkable collective effort. And it doesn’t have to end today. For many, we hope this serves as an entry point into the broader movement to address the issue of climate change. There are a number of ways and some amazing organizations through which you can continue to remain involved, and we encourage you to check out our Take Action section to learn more.
We will continue providing updates and information about the success of today’s event and ongoing opportunities for involvement–including the the October 24th International Day of Climate Action organized by our friends at 350.org–here in the weeks ahead, and we hope you’ll stay with us.
Thank you so much,
Robin Beck
Lead Organizer
Blog Action Day 2009
Google 9 New Ways to Search | by Adam Ostrow
Google continues to work to address the threat posed by the real-time search capabilities of services like Twitter and Facebook.
In May, they launched “Search Options” to allow users to refine search results by content type and time (within the past day was the timeliest you could get), but today, they’re launching a “past hour” filter to make its index even fresher.
Along with this key update, Google is rolling out 8 other search options which should be available to everyone at some point today. Those include the ability to search within a specific date range, shopping site filters, a visited pages filter, and an option to see only results from Google’s book, blog, and news search tools.
… [more]
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