Όταν ο καλός λόγος προέρχεται από κάποιον που δούλεψε με συνέχεια και συνέπεια, αναλύοντας με επιστημονικό τρόπο τα της επικοινωνίας των υποψήφίων, όπως εσύ, τότε είναι διπλά σημαντικός.
Εκ’ μέρους των παιδιών του frappelections σ’ ευχαριστώ
Excellent points. Honestly, there were only two blogs I “trusted” this entire campaign..for their “honest reporting” (not just repeats of spoon-fed “press releases”), objectivity, hard work and “kefi” Only two I felt were true reflections of what journalistic blogging is all about and those two were your blog Alex (apofasi) and Frappelections.
As for your suggestions above they are all right on.
As for Facebook, I would say ads are useful in the beginning to “gather” those who are supporters from the fringes of the Facebook community. Facebook “search” isn’t always reliable and with the difficulty of “spelling” names “in translation” from Greek to English…its pretty useful to have an ad out there (I have stats that show it was)
Twitter in Greece seems to be still be only for a few “proxorimenous” and probably will be until every Greek has an iPhone…or when Twitter allows more that 140 characters. (Greeks tend to have a lot to say)
So right about there not being websites that “ελέγχουν την προεκλογική καμπάνια” and those that are run by the populace or are USER generated..
Also, I would add that there is too much emphasis on “google search” and that eventually there should appear on the Greek web some places similar to Digg, or Stumbleupon or Yahoo Buzz….since the links status in social media groups is user generated and usually more objective.
From this entire campaign I have only one real “sxolio” and that is that the word “interactive” and “share” isn’t part of the Greek digital vocabulary.
Websites are like islands in the middle of nowhere…Blogs are like the “pareas” in the clubs here.. Hard to meet someone if you don’t have a “friend” in there…people are afraid to post or talk or share ..too much paranoia..
If it weren’t for your blog and the lists of links of other blogs you posted on the right side of the page..I would have never found Frappelections or the other blogs. I trusted your blog and the looked with interest at the blogs you suggested.
As for Aino…very cool from the beginning…But, I was wondering how it could be programmed to account for sensationalism…I mean it’s pretty easy to come up with “juicy” stuff everyday politician or otherwise…I know you mentioned in a few posts the difference between the more sensationalist curves and the true impact…but it wasn’t very clear how Aino did that…
Very glad there is a person like you here on the fringe of the Greek web… Informing and tweaking during the transition phase from “old school” paper journalism to the new digital medium (and the “integration” of both communication mediums into a composite whole). I really respect you standing there on the bridge and being one of those devoted ones who walk the rest over. It takes great patience, intelligence and compassion. Your contribution is priceless.
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1 | Γιατί χαίρομαι που δεν δούλεψα για πολιτικό σε αυτές τις εκλογές | Αλεξαρτησία
November 6, 2010 at 3:58 pm
[...] είναι; Όποιος λοιπόν θέλει να κάνουμε κάτι χρήσιμο (πατήστε εδώ για μερικές αρχικές προτάσεις – έρχονται κι άλλες την επόμενη εβδομάδα) για να [...]