Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Buzzdash: PowerPoint






Popular Culture Communication and Analysis on the Web


SlideShare Link

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

BuzzDash: Polling Quirky Data in 'Real Time'

There is a new community forming online. A percentage community. One that thrives on pie graphs and statistical data...but they're a rowdier bunch than you might assume. While their format requires mass number crunching, this particular Web 2.0 application and its users are anything but dry. They have, in fact, created a far more dynamic network than other social web 2.0 concepts I've seen.

BuzzDash.com is a polling community where anyone and everyone can "solicit, measure, and share opinions” on various issues in real time. The site is composed of over thirteen thousand "buzzbites", which are customizable polling modules, topics ranging from the more traditional (entertainment, sports, politics, and finance) to the more controversial and obscure (sexual preferences, philosophy, salad dressing, office behavior, shoe lacing strategy). Also, the polling "buzzbite" widget isn't restricted to just Buzzdash.com, "the module can be embedded in any personal web page or blog". Go ahead; create your very own poll and broadcast it to the world…(via myspace, facebook, etc). The site’s unspoken anthem: what you ask is as important as how you choose to respond.

In its Terms of Service, Buzzdash releases itself of all liability regarding user content: "You understand that by using the Service, you may be exposed to Content that is offensive, indecent or objectionable...This means that you, and not BuzzDash, are entirely responsible for all Content that you upload, post, email, transmit or otherwise make available via the Service." That being said, there isn't much you CAN'T find on BuzzDash. Site reviews include praise and appreciation for its "easy-to-use software" that seems to cater to the "obsessively curious". Its unique approach to tracking popular opinion has earned Marina del Ray based BuzzDash.com a place on PC World's 25 Web Sites to Watch (2007). It was also voted "Best Web 2.0" on allthingsweb2.com (2008).

My particular interest was peaked when I came across its sub-category labeled “relationship” (listed on homepage sidebar under ''other''). What kinds of questions are people asking in this network about sex, sexuality, love, marriage, dating, betrayal, divorce, children, childhood? How does this Internet audience differ from other audiences polled on the web? What are the gender discrepancies of online statistical research as compared to those found in other mediums? The breadth of question on this site is remarkable. Some of the recent polls posted include “Ladies: Would you sleep with a bi-sexual man?”, “Are your parents happy with the role religion plays in your life?”, “Parents with pets: do you love your kids or your pets more?”, “Should we have the right to choose to pay child support?”, “Are you more attracted to people with a different hair color than you?”.

I would imagine that part of the reason people become “addicted” to a network like Buzzdash is because it (seemingly) provides a direct route to that ever mysterious thing we call ‘normal behavior’. While charting a particular poll’s progress, you’re not reading between the lines. You’re reading numbers. You’re reading a very simplified explanation of very complex social indicators. Buzzdash presents immediate access to ‘average’, to a so-called normative. But does the public opinion aggregated on Buzzdash accurately represent greater trends of some sort? If you are registered with site you can, in fact, explore the particular demographic responses to polling prompts. If you click on the magnifying glass in bottom right hand corner of the buzzbite you are given these categories to choose from: Gender, Age, Geography, Marital Status, Political Affiliation, Race/ethnicity, and Household income. For the relationship buzzbite entitled, "If the fountain of youth was discovered, would you take a drink?", 1999 people have voted since its post date on July 17th... the problem being not all of these 1999 pollers have provided information regarding their age, race, marital status etc. Of all those votes only 25 have identified themselves as female and even less have identified their race/ethnicity.

With such an innovative way to track popular opinion on a wide variety of issues, I hope more people (not just those fluent in the world of web 2.0) decide to join this community. It will make the result more dynamic, more accurate, and perhaps generate type of discussions that are too embarrassing or "taboo" to prompt face-to-face.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

The Internet: Bringing people with STDs closer, for comfort

Online Dating Insider:
Evans writes a couple of posts about private-label dating sites that sponsor HIV/STD infected users

The Dating Weblog:
The Dating Weblog lists these as leading sites in STD social media,
-The Edge: based out of Boston, HIV dating site
-BeOneCity: based out of Los Angeles, working on creating a site particular to the heterosexual community
-PositiveSingles, PozitiveLiving, PozMatch.com, Positive Personals
-forums for information and not just meeting others

Scientificblogging.com:
HIV denialist organizations like "Reappraising AIDS" make it their mission to spread misinformation. They have a basic distrust of authority and of institutions of science and medicine. One of the prominent HIV denial groups currently is Christine Maggiore's “Alive and Well” (formerly “HEAL,” Health Education AIDS Liaison) (http://www.aliveandwell.org/). Maggiore's life story is at the center of this group. Diagnosed with HIV in 1992, Maggiore claims she has since been symptom-free for the past 14 years without the use of antiretroviral drugs, including protease inhibitors [10]. She has risen to prominence, and been embroiled in controversy, in recent years after giving birth to and openly breast-feeding her two children, Charles and Eliza Jane. She had neither child tested for HIV, and did not take antiretroviral medication during her pregnancy or subsequent breast-feeding [11]. Eliza Jane died in September 2005 of HIV-related pneumonia [12], though Maggiore remains unconvinced that HIV had any role in her daughter's death [13], and continues to preach her message to other HIV-positive mothers.

Picturephoning.com
Mobile phone pictures used to diagnose STDs online: "People too shy to visit an STD clinic can upload images of their intimate problems - and get an almost instant medical opinion. The pioneering service allows men and women to reveal worrying lumps or rashes without the ordeal of a face-to-face consultation. The pictures will be examined by doctors, who will send out any advice or prescription by post or email." permalink (May 26th, 2008)

Textually.org
There is a new SMS search service that allows South Africans to locate the closest HIV/AID testing site. This same service, hosted by Karabo.org.za, Levi Strauss teamed with South Africa, provides anonymous and confidential mobile counseling services. The Cape-based organization called "Cell Life" has teamed up with mobile technology: Hannan Crusaid's 40 counsellors have been trained to use cellphones equipped with a special menu that allows them to capture data about patients' symptoms and pill taking as well as other factors that might affect their health such as lack of money to pay for transport to the clinic, or a shortage of food. The information is relayed instantly over Vodacom's GSM network to a central database, which can be accessed by clinic staff over a secure connection. In addition to their scheduled visits, counsellors arrive unannounced once every four months to do a pill count. The information they collect is compared with clinic data on the number of pills issued to patients, and enables staff to spot looming trouble. The cellphones are not used to remind HIV patients to take their pills, partly because they are encouraged to manage their own health, but also because it would not be practical to send mass alerts on a long-term basis.