48 Hours on Wikipedia
Lies inserted into Wikipedia get corrected quickly, a small study finds.
Lies inserted into Wikipedia get corrected quickly, a small study finds.
A new paper describes why early papers get big returns on citations. Fortunately, it is not a case of winner-takes-all.
Text messaging and its social and linguistic effects are examined in a new book.
Project COUNTER releases its third Code of Practice for the counting and reporting of usage data. Is COUNTER also promoting overconfidence in its products?
The SSP TMR has closed, but much of the meeting was captured. Here’s your guide, and insights on why the meeting will evolve next year.
Listen to interviews from David Perlmutter (“Blog Wars”), Scott Hensley (WSJ), Fabien Saveney (ScienceBlogs), and more at the SSP TMR blog.
Six degrees of separation is now down to three. Will you join? We’ll be talking about such things at the SSP TMR in Philadelphia this week, as well.
Google’s Chrome debuts, and reaffirms that Google knows exactly what it is doing.
A few weeks after giving up my Treo, I’ve found the iPhone to be quite an impressive little machine.
VP choice Sarah Palin’s Wikipedia entry was modified prior to her being announced as the choice. Could the news have broken earlier if the media were more tech-savvy? And why are all the Wikipedia editors anonymous?
In case you were on vacation, here are some dishes you might have missed during our summer season.