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Where have all the bloggers gone? Well, basically the places you would expect. Lots in Boston, lots in Austin, lots on the coast, and a surprising dispersal in Florida (?). This is, of course, a work in progress. I had hoped to get something together for the weblog ecosystem workshop next month at WWW, but didn’t quite make the deadline. (And didn’t find out until too late that the deadline had been pushed back a week!) Luckily, one of my advisees is more diligent and got in a preliminary piece of her dissertation. The paper looks at a procedure for estimating the location of a given blog.

The map here is based on a sample of a listing from the NITLE census, and looks only at blogs hosted by Livejournal and Diaryland. If I can update it to include self-owned domains (maybe sometime in the next couple of weeks), I’ll put that up too. Basically, the circles indicate the number of bloggers in each area defined by the first 3 digits of the zip code.

(Click for larger map. Disclaimer: IANAG.)

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2 Comments

  1. Posted 4/29/2004 at 6:47 pm | Permalink

    are you tracking blogging groups that use tools like meetup.org to coordinate? That would give you snapshots of people in certain areas. As well, only in the USA, eh? I guess no one else bloggs on the planet.

  2. Posted 4/29/2004 at 7:56 pm | Permalink

    Well, we were going to include some of those Canadian states, but the post office told me we have acquired Canada yet. You know, I hear there’s oil and natural gas up there somewhere, so it’s just a matter of time.

    Seriously, I’m not sure why we didn’t do North America. Going international in general would multiply the complexity significantly. E.g., we would need to find info on Canadian postal code Long/Lat centroids, population data, etc. I’m sure these are available, but it about doubles the work involved.

    The problem with, e.g., tracking those who use meetup is that there isn’t any standard way to find it on the page. We’re trying to set up a process by which a program can take a pretty decent guess at where a blogger is. Livejournal and diaryland were the low-hanging fruit here: often with clear indications of the bloggers local.

4 Trackbacks

  1. By Det perfekta tomrummet on 4/29/2004 at 4:24 am

    Bloggars geografiska fördelning
    Häromdan skrev jag om fördelningen av bloggar och föreslog att man studera fördelningen geografiskt, kanske med hjälp av data från…

  2. By Discourse.net on 4/29/2004 at 7:52 am

    Florida Is a Bloghaven?
    This is surprising: =< Halavais: News>=: Where have all the bloggers gone? Well, basically the places you would expect. Lots in Boston, lots in Austin, lots on the coast, and a surprising dispersal in Florida (?) See the cool map too (albeit only…

  3. By Right Side of the Rainbow on 4/30/2004 at 9:27 pm

    From whence come the blogs?
    Halavais has a map showing the concentration of U.S. blogs by zip code. (Note: the map includes only those blogs using the LiveJournal or Dairyland platforms, but it&#146s interesting nevertheless.) Does no one in Montana have anything to say?…

  4. By Blog de Halavais on 5/3/2004 at 9:59 am

    Blogs in America
    I put up the =-” href=”http://alex.halavais.net/news/archives/000913.html”>map a few days ago, here is a pdf of the short paper that goes…

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