Dec 20, 2007 in Twingly
GLife is the first social network that starts using Twingly. They’ve already launched on Nightlife.se and Glife.se on all of their articles. Later, they’re also going to use Twingly as a trackback function on their member blogs.
The inclusion of Glife and Nightlife now mean that over 40 web sites are using Twingly to link back to blogs!
This post was written by Anton
Nov 14, 2007 in Twingly
The biggest daily newspaper in Finland, Helsingin Sanomat launched Twingly today to link back to the blogs that link to their articles. In that way they will stimulate the blogosphere to cover their articles even more extensively.
- We look forward to the response from the Finnish blogosphere and hope for an interesting debate, says Lassi Kurkijärvi, Business Development Manager av Helsingin Sanomat Digitala Media. As the biggest newspaper in Finland we get a lot of attention from the bloggers. To develop that relation we now start to link back to the bloggers, and it will be exciting to see the outcome.
Twingly is currently indexing about 35,000 blogs in Finland and has a Finnish version of the ping service at Twingly.com
This post was written by Martin
Sep 20, 2007 in Twingly
Ekonominyheterna has launched Twingly Blogstream to open up to blog comments on their articles. They are the business and financial news from the Swedish TV-channel TV4 and the first business publication to join the Twinglysphere with Ekonominyheterna.se.
-We look forward to the blogger’s comments on our articles, says Ulf Skarin, Chief Editor at Ekonominyheterna.se. We think it is editorial interesting to connect traditional journalism with the enthusiasm and knowledge in the blogosphere.
In the Swedish blogosphere there are a lot of buzz about business issues, but there are not that many niched blogs about business and finance. We hope that Ekonominyheterna’s integration of Twingly can help to change that to stimulate even further discussions in the blogosphere on financial matters.
We welcome them to the Twinglysphere and hope that it should give them a good relation with the blogosphere to generate more traffic and interest in their news.
This post was written by Martin
Sep 11, 2007 in Twingly
The most influential blog in Denmark is the political blog Uriasposten according to the Twingly Report we release today of the Danish blogosphere.
Other blogs with great influence are Slagt en hellig ko and Hovedetpaabloggen.dk while the blog from the Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen who with great political influence only has the 45th most influential blog in Denmark.
The report is based on number of links from other Danish bloggers, which is a good way to measure the influence and interest within the blogosphere, and reflects posts from June 1 to August 27, 2007.
The report is published in conjunction with Cision, former Observer, who have formed a partnership with Primelabs to be able to offer analysis of the Danish blogosphere to their customers, in addition to traditional media analysis.
This post was written by Martin
Aug 29, 2007 in Twingly
Today the global successful TV-show Idol (the Swedish equivalent of American Idol) started using Twingly at the official website at TV4.se. They are using the Twingly widget to link back to the blogs that are linking to their articles. Idol in Sweden is just as popular as the show is in many other countries and is one of the biggest TV-shows at TV4 this fall.
This is the first time Twingly is used on a niche and trend sensitive website to connect with the latest in the blogosphere.
We welcome TV4 to the Twinglysphere and wish the best of luck to all new Idols!
This post was written by Martin
Jun 27, 2007 in Twingly
IDG in Sweden is the latest addition to the Twinglysphere, using Twingly Blogstream to link back to the blogs that are linking to their articles. IDG publishes more than 300 magazines and newspapers in 85 countries.
They are also the first site to use the new widget technology which is very easy to integrate and manage. A widget is just a piece of HTML-code that is added to a page template which is a swift way to get new functionality on a website. By using Twingly Blogstream as a widget, there is no need for any extra coding, just copy and paste. This makes it possible for any website to use Twingly within only a couple of hours.
IDG will not only use Twingly on IDG.se but on all of their publication’s websites in Sweden, as Internetworld, Cap & Design etc. Other publications using Twingly are for instance the two major Swedish morning dailies Dagens Nyheter and Svenska Dagbladet.
This post was written by Martin
Jun 18, 2007 in Twingly
Twingly Report Sweden that is released today shows that the humorous blog Tjuvlyssnat.se is the most linked blog in Sweden. The Report also reveals some previous unknown facts about the blogosphere. The purpose of the Report is to share knowledge and generate interest in the blogosphere. The Report is available at www.primelabs.se/twingly (only in Swedish though), where you also find the data that the Report is based on.
We have analyzed how blogs are linking to each other and what they write about. We have within several categories measured the influence the blogs have and can therefore present the most influential blog in each category. Interesting to see is that current Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs Carl Bildt does not only have great influential in political issues in Sweden, but has also the most influential political blog in the Swedish blogosphere.
We have also covered what people are blogging about and it reveals that Swedish bloggers love the spring, life and food, but hates funerals, snow and school.
Blogs have in a short while become an important medium with for instance great influence of the political scene. Up until now there hasn’t been that much knowledge available about the blogosphere. But with our blog search engine Twingly we can basically extract any kind of data from the blogosphere. What would you like to know about your blogosphere?
This post was written by Martin
Apr 4, 2007 in Twingly, Twingly Partners
Our first month with Twingly has been intense, interesting and fun. The feedback has been overwhelming, and we’re thrilled by all the positive comments reaching us. We feel it’s time to sum up recent events and share our view of things to come.
Launch
Twingly was launched on February 6 by the largest Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter at DN.se. The immediate feedback was very positive and the following day the second largest daily Svenska Dagbladet launched their implementation of the service at Svd.se.
Twingly has created new opportunities and important changes both in the Swedish blogosphere and for the major news web sites. DN and SvD have, since launching Twingly, been overtaking all other news sites in terms of links coming from the blogosphere - an effect that we’re obviously thrilled by.
While launching Twingly at DN and SvD was a big event for us, we’ve also been up to other things.
Twingly Screensaver
In February we released our global blog activity 3D visualization into the public domain. Our two (very talented) students Malin and Linus did a really great job with it - it’s very cool, slightly useful (as a screensaver) but most importantly it shows a great overview of what’s going on in the blogosphere. Right now several thousand people are using it every day and our demo movie on Youtube has been watched by131,000 people.
Sunday Times in South Africa will be using Twingly
The largest weekly in South Africa, The Sunday Times, have chosen Primelabs and Twingly as their provider of blog data. We’re of course thrilled and hope to be able to announce even more international customers this spring.
The Future
We look ahead with great confidence and see a bright future for Twingly. Feedback from the blogosphere and media has been overwhelmingly positive, which gives us a lot of confidence now that we’ll move into international sales. Our vision is to evolve through the services we provider, so we’ll be continuously adding new functions and services. The Twingly website is currently just an embryo and will be developing both in terms of form and function.
Thank you!
So many things have happened in the few months since launch. We would like to take this opportunity to thank all the bloggers, the media and everyone for the enthusiasm and energy you’ve contributed with. We had great expectations but had still not counted on getting such awesome feedback.
This post was written by Martin
Feb 14, 2007 in Twingly
Today we’re releasing a beta version of our new screensaver/application that displays, in real time, where blogs are being written across the globe.
Check out the clip below - and download your very own copy at http://www.twingly.se/screensaver.aspx. If you find any bugs or have questions about the install process, send us a mail at screensaver at twingly.com.
You’ll need a serial number to run the screen saver, you can get one by entering your e-mail adress on the download page.
All data is streamed through Amazon S3 in order to sustain the bandwith required. Variations in the data flow is due to Twingly indexing and not due to the actual amount of blogs being written.
When the data flow is too big, all posts will not be visible in the scroll list, so you might not see your own posts.
Although we filter out quite a bit of spam, there are loads of weird things going on in the blogosphere, so use common sense when clicking on links and keep this product out of the reach of childen.
Update: beta serial is no longer required. Download freely.
[youtube zgIT-hfgOXY]
This post was written by Martin
Feb 14, 2007 in Media, Twingly, Twingly Partners
The Washington Post and The New York Times have established a strong relationship with bloggers by linking back to posts linking to their articles. This strategy has created a wealth of new values for both bloggers and the newspapers and has been easily integrated with other new media strategies without any compromises being made in terms of quality or reader value. The advantages for bloggers receiving traffic from newspapers have been numerous:
- Bloggers receive more attention and traffic.
- New bloggers writing about serious subjects get more readers from day one.
- The blogging phenomenon as such receives more attention.
- The widespread but erroneous public image of blogs as inward looking diaries rapidly disappears.
- The general interest in citizen journalism increases and more people are given the opportunity to take part in the public debate.
The advantages for newspapers linking back to bloggers are equally plentiful:
- Editorial value: the newspapers readers can take part in vastly more interesting and relevant discussions than those normally present in discussion forums and article comment systems.
- Articles continue to be read long after they have trickled off the first page of the newspaper’s web site, thereby substantially increasing their lifespan.
- Bloggers have a much stronger incitement to link to a newspaper linking back to them than to competitors not doing the same thing.
- The newspaper establishes its brand towards a dynamic and hard-to-reach market segment.
The increased number of links to the newspapers articles substantially increases its search engine ranking, thereby drawing additional readers.
- It creates a strong community around the newspapers web site without shutting the door on established blog writers with an established reader base by forcing them to migrate to a proprietary blogging platform.
- If newspapers are to remain important to journalism in the future as they have been in the past, they will need to position themselves accordingly in social media today.
Swedish and Scandinavian news sites are well aware of all of the above and are working in the right direction. Newspapers know that they can no longer exist in a vacuum and that they have all to gain from intermeshing with the blogosphere.
Primelabs recently launched the blog search engine Twingly, which provides a robust technical solution for indexing all blogs linking to newspapers. Twingly is a full-scale blogosphere indexing solution. It is therefore able to apply robust spam filtering and authority analysis in ensuring data quality. Twingly exposes a web based API which makes it easy to integrate the service into any web publication system. Twingly does not filter results, but provides tools for preventing abuse to our customers.
In early February 2007, the two largest Swedish dailies (DN, SvD) started using Twingly, thereby becoming the first European dailies linking back to the blogosphere.
This post was written by Martin