via Mail bekommen, gleich mal damit rumgespielt: Tweetvolume zeigt die Häufigkeit verwendeter Wörter an.
Apple, Microsoft, Google, Yahoo, YouTube:
in der Mail stand was von gut drauf sein: For example, 3,800 folks have twittered about being sad and 13,000 people have twittered about being happy. Clearly, Twitter users are happy people. Is that because they drink coffee (14,200) about three times more than tea (4,610)? Who knows.
Neue Stellenangebote
(Senior) Social Media Manager:in (m/w/d) – NRW TAS Emotional Marketing GmbH in Essen |
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Social Media Assistant (m/w/d) Kanebo Cosmetics Deutschland GmbH in Hamburg |
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Customer Service & Social Media Specialist / Kundenberater / Social Media Manager (m/w/d) Maynards Europe GmbH in Starnberg |
good, bad, better, worse:
und die Deutschen?
69% gut, 10% schlecht, 19% besser, 2% schlechter vs.
59% good, 18% bad, 21% better, 2% worse
sprich: 88% finden was gut, 12% nicht gut vs 80% good/better, 20% nicht gut
hey, deutsche Poweruser sind gar nicht so miesepetrig drauf im internationalen Vergleich:)))
Wie auch immer, eigentlich wollte ich nur darauf hinweisen:
Support for @Replies
We noticed a whole bunch of Twitter-ers adopting a new way to communicate specifically to individuals in a public way by adding an @ symbol before a username like this: „@biz thinking I’ll get a soy latte too!“ To make this experience a bit better, we added a few features to support this behavior.– The Replies Tab will display an archive of @replies
– @Replies are followed by an ‚in reply to‘ link for context
– @username automatically links the username to the profile