Is the social web in Australia just Facebook?

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Facebook has recently turned 6 years old and they have released ‘Facebook FactLook’ which is an overview of where Facebook stands now and some points about the average FB user (global)...




The numbers are pretty impressive with Facebook growing over 200% last year and having recently surpassed Google in the US with unique visitors...


From an Australian perspective, in October 2009 alone, users spent 27.2 hours browsing online and 7.55 hours of the total was sucked up by Facebook (nearly one third all time spent)
MySpace managed just 39 minutes and Twitter 17 minutes, confirming my initial thoughts back then that Myspace was descending deeper into nothingness and that Twitter had a high account sign up rate but that regular usage was minimal.

Facebook said its Australian users in October had uploaded 80 million pictures and written 32 million “wall posts” and 45 million “status updates”.
If more Facebook hype is needed, Nielsen has also crunched global data which shows Australia now leads the world for time spent each month on social media sites (7.12 hours), ahead of Britain, Italy, North America and Japan which is significant.

Therefore my view is that the social web space in AU is just Facebook with a handful of bloggers thrown in for good measure, making social web strategies pretty straightforward!


This may well change in the near future but we'll have to wait and see if apps such as Foursquare, which has been heralded as the next big thing, can make a bigger dent that Twitter as it received the same billing this time last year...

One Young World Summit In London 2010

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For me as a 25 year old, this is directly relevant to my future, and my children's future. Lets see more of this...
Inspiring stuff for young and old...

Stefana Broadbent: How the Internet Enables Intimacy

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Mashable recently pulled together a fantastic post of the Top 5 Insightful TED Talks On Social Media which I highly recommend that you watch...

One of those most interesting to me was by Stefana Broadbent, a sociologist, who talks about her view of the impact of technology on intimacy and relationships.
The widely accepted view at the moment is that even though we as a global population are now more connected than ever, the quality and depth of those connections tend to be focused on shallow micro-interactions such as tweets, status updates and the ubiquitous text message...

However, Stefana disputes this and gives solid examples of how technology has in fact allowed us to become more connected at a more in-depth level and that communication devices such as mobile phones, computers and specific technology such as IM and Skype give us the opportunity to interact more regularly.

You can watch her talk here which is all of 9 minutes long. It's a really interesting and compelling alternative view which has certainly questioned the assumption that human relations are suffering due to the tech barrier: