A Digital Identity - An Algorithm For The Soul
¿Iphone 5?
cnet:

iPhone 5: 15 most-wanted features

Avance : Nuevo Samsung Galaxy S III

cnet:

First look: Samsung Galaxy S III proves the rumors right

Samsung just unveiled the highly-anticipated successor to the Galaxy S II. Was it worth the wait? Well, it boasts a 4.8-inch HD Super AMOLED display, an 8-megapixel camera, 2,100mAh removable battery, and a quad-core Exynos processor. Oh, and it runs Android 4.0.

Get our hands on First Take

Google + Brand Pages report

marketingland:

Report: 6 Months In, Google+ Brand Pages Show Continued Growth

Simply Measured released a report focusing in on Google+ brand page adoption and engagement since inception. One constant across all of the data is growth. 

How People Spend Their Time Online 
courtenaybird:

How People Spend Their Time Online 

Google Plus and the Road to 100 Million Users

visualoop:

Via

It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.
Aristotle (via mossycece)

How Social Media Activity Impacts Organic Search Rankings

visualoop:

Via

gjmueller:

10 Commandments of Twitter for Academics
Put up an avatar. It doesn’t really matter what the picture is, but the “egg picture” (the default avatar for new accounts) makes you look like a spammer.
Don’t pick a Twitter name that is difficult to spell or remember.
Tweet regularly.
Don’t ignore people who tweet at you. Set Twitter to send you an e-mail notification when you get a mention or a private message. If you don’t do that, then check your account frequently.
Engage in conversation. Don’t just drop in to post your own update and disappear. Twitter is not a “broadcast-only” mechanism; it’s CB radio.
Learn the hashtags for your subject field or topics of interest, and use them.
Don’t just make statements. Ask questions.
Don’t just post links to news articles. I don’t need you to be my aggregator.
Do show your personality. Crack some jokes.
Have fun.

photo via flickr:CC | @jbtaylo

gjmueller:

10 Commandments of Twitter for Academics

  1. Put up an avatar. It doesn’t really matter what the picture is, but the “egg picture” (the default avatar for new accounts) makes you look like a spammer.
  2. Don’t pick a Twitter name that is difficult to spell or remember.
  3. Tweet regularly.
  4. Don’t ignore people who tweet at you. Set Twitter to send you an e-mail notification when you get a mention or a private message. If you don’t do that, then check your account frequently.
  5. Engage in conversation. Don’t just drop in to post your own update and disappear. Twitter is not a “broadcast-only” mechanism; it’s CB radio.
  6. Learn the hashtags for your subject field or topics of interest, and use them.
  7. Don’t just make statements. Ask questions.
  8. Don’t just post links to news articles. I don’t need you to be my aggregator.
  9. Do show your personality. Crack some jokes.
  10. Have fun.

photo via flickr:CC | @jbtaylo

philphys:

“O men of Athens, is the truth and the whole truth; I have concealed nothing, I have dissembled nothing. And yet I know that this plainness of speech makes them hate me, and what is their hatred but a proof that I am speaking the truth?”
-Apology, Plato

philphys:

“O men of Athens, is the truth and the whole truth; I have concealed nothing, I have dissembled nothing. And yet I know that this plainness of speech makes them hate me, and what is their hatred but a proof that I am speaking the truth?”

-Apology, Plato

The Pinterest (P)infographic

visualoop:

Instagram by Numbers 

visualoop:

HAL9000