The statistical importance of Social Media

I am not a statistician but I am guessing that I observed a fairly unusual statistical event today. While browsing my feed on Facebook to see what my friends have been up to I came across a couple of similar posts. Two of my friends from different “networks” in different states both posted that their kids were having a 10 year old birthday today the exact same minute, check it out (and I’ll get to the importance part near the end of this article):

Statistical Coincidence

Statistical Coincidence

So statisticians out there, am I exaggerating the significance of this or are these Lottery type odds? Here are some of the unique and similar aspects of the event:

  1. These two friends are from completely different groups of people.
  2. They are in different states.
  3. Both of them have children turning 10 today.
  4. They posted the news within the same minute.
  5. I had 1,429 Facebook Friends at the time of the posting.

I’ve come to view the world as much smaller and the connections between people a lot closer. I really enjoy finding in particular that people from completely unrelated groups know each other. It also is really rewarding when I see unrelated friends become friends without an introduction, just by being mutual friends of mine. I know that lots of people bang the drums about social media being good and bad. If I make as few as one good friendship from it the rewards for that are long lasting and well worth the investment. Needless to say it has definitely been a good investment for me, in many ways. It is events like this that make me think about that, noticing something unique and uncommon. Speaking of unique and common, I have also learned things about friends via Social Media that I am not sure I ever would have IRL (In Real Life). It has definitely brought me closer to people who I was acquainted with.

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Farewell Ning Free Another Freemium Site Bites the Dust

Image representing Ning as depicted in CrunchBase
Image via CrunchBase

So it’s official the new Ceo of NING the social network tool is officially plowing the freemium model under and they will henceforth charge for their service. This is not a wise decision in my view but perhaps they see it as necessary to survive because they failed to monetize. What are some alternatives?

Wild Apricot
Rsitez
SocialGo
BoonEx
BuddyPress
Elgg
Joomla
JomSocial
Tuiyo
WackWall
Crowdvine
Spruz
SocialEngine
KickApps
SocialCast
The Online Family Center
Google Friend Connect
Huminity
I-Neighbors
MediaWiki
Grou.ps
Webbours
Groupsite
Stribe
Imentor
Igroops
SocialSam
MemberWing
Webs
Neeetz
Mixxt
CircleBuilder
Shutterfly

Much thanks to Janettee McCrary for sharing the above list.

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Amplify to allow Blogging

I received a notice from Amplify.com today that I am extremely excited about. I’ve been advocating amplify as a simple way for anyone to engage and improve their social media experience since I joined earlier this year. These latest changes make it more practical and provide for a richer experience. Here is a copy of the Email notice I receive today:

Introducing blogging, background images & privacy options
Hi Joe Hackman,

1. Blogging on Amplify:

Our mission has always been to give people a place to talk about news, ideas, thoughts or anything else that’s on their mind.  Currently on the web, there are different services that offer specific ways to talk about things.  On Twitter you can say anything, as long as it’s under 140 characters.  On blogs, you can write long form posts that take greater time and consideration.  Using services like ShareThis, AddThis and many others you can share links to news or other interesting things you find on the web.  We chose to support blogging on Amplify to roll up all these capabilities into one service – so now everything you want to talk about on the web can flow through one coherent stream.

2. Background images:

You can now upload your own background image or change the background color of your Amplog (visit Settings >> Design).  To make sure our header works well with background images, we also removed the dark blue header that used to stretch across the top of all pages.

3. Privacy:

If you would like to control who can follow you on Amplify, you can now visit Settings >> Privacy to enable that option.  Once that’s enabled, you can approve anyone who requests to follow you.  You may also notice a “block” link in every user’s profile (shown on the right side of user pages and displayed on mouse-over of profile pictures).  This gives you the option to block a user from following you or commenting on your posts.

To try blogging and to set your privacy controls, visit amplify.com.  We hope you enjoy these new features and appreciate your feedback and support.


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