Here are my slides from last night’s joint talk for the Institution of Engineering and Technology and the Computer Society…
Monthly Archive for November, 2008
From the latest IIA and AMAS State of the Net Issue 11:
Online Advertising
Online audience measurement in Ireland is dogged by a torrent of data. Some of it is irrelevant (such as hits on a website, which aren’t a true measure of online traffic) and little of it is directly comparable. This makes the job of media planners, the professionals who buy online advertising, a challenging one.
The arrival of a new mechanism to measure traffic on Irish websites is welcome, particularly as it offers a robust methodology and directly comparable data. The Internet Audience Measurement (IAM) is an initiative of Bluemetrix, the Irish company which measures online traffic in distant markets such as Japan and Scandinavia.
Its software was running on 38 Irish websites when the first tranche of data, on which our graph is based, was released in early November. Not all the big sites are signed up and some of those that are (such as Daft.ie and The Irish Times) did not have any stats available for the first monthly release.
But while, the top 10 table is limited in its scope, it enables like-for-like comparisons as the same measurement tool is used. This new measure will gain in importance over coming months, as more sites sign up and more data becomes available.

Source: Bluemetrix study of 38 Irish websites for October 2008 (www.irelandmetrix.ie)
The winners of the SIOC (pronounced “shock”) data competition being run by DERI at the National University of Ireland, Galway have been announced. The competition ran from September to October 2008, and the brief was to produce an interesting creation based on a data set of discussion posts reflecting ten years of Irish online life from boards.ie, Ireland’s largest community website. The competition had about sixty registrants and there were eight final submissions of very high quality.
The top winning submission was entitled “SIOC.ME: A Real-Time Interactive Visualisation of boards.ie Semantic Data within a 3-D Space”. The entry illustrates how 3-D visualisations may be harnessed to not only provide an interactive means of presenting or browsing data but also to create useful data analysis tools, especially for manipulating the “semantic” (meaningful) data from online communities and social networking sites. The entry was submitted by Darren Geraghty, a user interface and interaction designer, and it was praised by the judges for the huge amount of effort that went into creating it. A video of the application may be viewed here and a demonstration of the tool can be seen at go.sioc.me.
In second place was a visualisation application called “boardsview” by Stephen Dolan of Trinity College Dublin. This is an interactive, real-time animation where one can watch the historical content from many discussion forums changing in real or compressed time. In this application, you can zoom into a particular forum to see individual users posting messages or to see threads being created and destroyed.
Third prize was awarded to the “Forum Activity Graph” by Drew Perttula from California. This entry was a visualisation showing the popularity of forums on boards.ie as represented by coloured rivers of information, which were then rendered and displayed using Google Maps.
Other final submissions included:
- “Forum Map Demonstration” by Tristan Webb and Ian Dickinson of HP Labs Bristol, a demonstration of self-organising maps applied to an information navigation problem in a big community site,
- “WebThere: Semantic APML Profiles” by Brian MacKay from Pennsylvania, a service for creating and maintaining profiles of user interests and attention preferences in social websites,
- “Find Something Interesting” by ITT Dublin’s Alexandra Roshchina and Aleksey Kharkov, an application to provide recommendations of the most interesting posts and threads based on interest-matching and graph-mining techniques,
- “ChartBoards” by Martin Harrigan of TCD, a tool for examining community trends via term frequencies, and,
- “Visualising the boards.ie Community Culture with Charts” by Eoin McLoughlin of TCD, where various graph types were used to simplify the huge amount of available community data to something that could allow someone to easily grasp its size and depth.
The competition was judged by an independent panel of three experts: Ian Davis, Chief Technology Officer with Talis; Harry Halpin, researcher at the University of Edinburgh and chair of the W3C GRDDL working group; and Peter Mika, researcher at Yahoo! Research Barcelona and author of the book “Social Networks and the Semantic Web”. The first prize is an Amazon voucher for $4000; second prize is a voucher for $2000; third prize is a voucher for $1000.
- Best Financial Services Website - www.irishdeposits.ie
- Best Travel, Tourism and Hospitality Website - www.ireland-guide.com
- Best Digital Media Website - www.tv3.ie
- Best Sports and Leisure Website - www.imra.ie
- Best Community and Charity Website - www.heartsplay.ie
- Best Education, Research and Training Website - www.osi.ie
- Best E-Business Website (exclusive to web business) - www.litriocht.com
- Best Property Website (non portal) - www.chesterfieldblackrock.ie
- Best Mobile Content or Application - www.sentrywireless.com
- Best New Indigenous Website 2008 - www.movies.ie
- Best Use of Film, Digital Animation or Motion Graphics - www.thebellatwylye.com
- Best Blog - www.mulley.net
- Best E-Government Website - www.osi.ie
- Best Entertainment and Games-Related Website - www.redfm.ie
- Best FMCG Website (fast-moving consumer goods) - www.lucozadesport.ie
- Best Recruitment Website - www.prosperity.ie
- Best Interactive Marketing Campaign - www.mrtayto.ie
- Best Professional Services Website - www.rbk.ie
- Best Web Design and Development Agency - www.webfactory.ie
- Best Retail and Home Shopping Website - www.toyota.ie
- Best Social Networking and Community Website (people’s choice) www.boards.ie
- Young Designer of the Year - Naoise O Conchubhair
- Internet Hero - Aodhan Cullen
- Grand Prix - www.tv3.ie
Boards.ie scoops Golden Spider award
JOHN COLLINS
ONLINE FORUM Boards.ie netted the inaugural People’s Choice Award at the Eircom Golden Spiders internet awards, which were presented in Dublin last night by comedian Des Bishop.
The hugely popular discussion forum was the “clear winner”, according to the organisers in the category where members of the public were invited to vote for their favourite social networking and community website.
Aodhan Cullen, founder of the free web-traffic measurement service StatCounter, was selected as 2008 Internet Hero by a panel of judges. Founded by Cullen nine years ago when he was just 16 years old, StatCounter now tracks over three million websites and 10 billion pageloads a month.
Having this month relaunched its website following a major overhaul, which added features such as video “catch-up” of popular shows including the X Factor and the Apprentice, broadcaster TV3 picked up two awards: the Eircom Grand Prix Award and Best Digital Media.
Despite having been a vocal critic of the awards, which are now in their twelfth year, internet commentator Damien Mulley was awarded Best Blog. The Spiders judges also recognised Sentry Wireless’s Kidsafe as best mobile content or application, despite mobile operators recently claiming to Minister of State for Children Barry Andrews that they had found it to be technically deficient.
Other category winners included imra.ie (Irish Mountain Running Association), heartsplay.ie (Crumlin childrens hospital) and Movies.ie.
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/finance/2008/1121/1227137519507.html
I read an interesting Gartner talk summary by Ross Dawson about the distributed social web, via another blog post by Chris Saad. Building blocks like OpenID, oAuth and microformats are mentioned in both posts, and I wanted to pipe up on behalf of the Semantic Web (if I may)…
A distributed social web is one of the ultimate goals of projects like FOAF and SIOC. Both FOAF and SIOC have recently been listed by Yahoo! SearchMonkey as recommended vocabularies (FOAF for personal profiles and social networks and SIOC for blogs, discussion forums and Q&A sites). Ross, if you like this topic, then you’ll probably love ideas like SMOB (Semantic Microblogging), where people can keep their microblog entries in their own space and then push them to as many Twitter-like aggregation services as they want. See my post on this here.
Also, here’s a slidedeck about SIOC for the uninitiated:
See also:
- Tales from the SIOC-o-sphere #8 (the latest news from the world of SIOC)
- The web-wide social network (Chris Saad)
- Gartner on the distributed social web (Ross Dawson)
According to island of Ireland audited data on Irish websites from ABCe, boards.ie has the second highest number of unique visitors in Ireland, currently at 1.7 million compared with RTÉ’s 2.1 million visitors. This is more than the combined audited figures for both the Irish Times plus MyHome.ie (1.5 million) and for IN&M’s Irish Independent plus PropertyNews.com (1.2 million).
Daft currently tops the page impressions league, with 86 million pages in September 2008. boards.ie had 22 million, ahead of the Irish Times and the Irish Independent (18 million each).
You can view the September 2008 ABCe certificate for boards.ie. See also the press release from Daft.
I am happy to announce that the judges for the boards.ie SIOC Data Competition are:
- Ian Davis, Talis
- Harry Halpin, University of Edinburgh
- Peter Mika, Yahoo! Research
We had about sixty registrants and eight final submissions of very high quality. We will announce the winners in a few weeks time…
The Social Semantic Web
Speaker: Dr. John Breslin, Engineering and Informatics, NUI Galway
Date and Time: 27th November 2008, 18:15
Venue: DERI, IDA Business Park, Dangan, Galway - useamap.com/deri
Open to the public, no attendance fee
The Social Web - social networking services, blogs and wikis - has captured the attention of millions of users as well as billions of dollars in investment and acquisition. As more social websites form around the connections between people and their objects of interest, more intuitive methods are needed for representing and navigating the content in these sites. Also, to better enable user access to multiple sites, interoperability among social websites is required. This talk will describe the semantic technologies that can be used to interconnect both people and objects on the Social Web.
John Breslin, BE (Electronics), PhD, MIET - www.johnbreslin.org
John Breslin is a lecturer at the Department of Electronic Engineering in the College of Engineering and Informatics at the National University of Ireland, Galway. He is also an associate researcher and leader of the Social Software Unit at the Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI) in NUI Galway, the world’s largest Semantic Web research institute. He is the founder of the SIOC project, which aims to interlink online community sites using semantic technologies, and which has been deployed in over 50 applications including Yahoo! SearchMonkey. The Irish Internet Association presented him with Net Visionary awards in 2005 and 2006 for the Irish community website boards.ie, which he co-founded in 2000.
For further information contact: Mark on 087 1251858 / mneedham@theiet.org
or the Institution of Engineering and Technology Ireland Network.
- For those in Ireland or abroad who are interested in the Semantic Web, the 2nd Vocabulary Camp (VoCamp Galway for short) will be held in Galway on the 25th and 26th of November in DERI. VoCamp is an informal (free) event where people can learn about or create lightweight vocabularies / ontologies for the “web of data”. Places are limited to 30, so you should sign up quickly if interested…
- The next day (27th of November at 6 PM), I’ll be giving a talk for the IET and CompSoc on the Social Semantic Web in DERI. As I’m currently co-authoring a book on this topic, it’s a good time to discuss this area.
- Finally, the W3C Workshop on the Future of Social Networking will be held on the 15th and 16th of January next in the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Barcelona. The deadline for submitting position papers is on the 20th of November, but position papers don’t have to be long or complex: a one-page description of your views on the current needs of the industry would be a very useful contribution to this workshop.









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