Archive: Year: 2007

10/22/2007

Our first weekend saw about 7,000 unique visits over Saturday and Sunday, bringing 10Questions.com to a total of nearly 24,000 since launch. Among our co-sponsors, the weekend saw big news portals like MSNBC and the New York Times move up in their impact on traffic compared to more partisan blog sites. The number of video questions submitted rose to 47, and we went past 17,700 votes cast by 4,600 individual participants. That means, roughly speaking, if you count the two days of the weekend like one weekday, we’re still on a pace of seeing about 4,000-5,000 new votes a day and about 1,100 to 1,200 new voters joining in each day. We’ll see if those trends continue this week. One other useful...

10/22/2007

As I wrote over the weekend, there is definitely a Dodd boomlet happening among the netroots. The DailyKos October straw poll shows him soundly in second place, rising from 7% to 21% and supplanting Barack Obama. Considering that the September 24 poll of Kossacks showed Dodd in fourth, well behind John Edwards, Obama and Hillary Clinton, this is quite a shift. Not only that, his campaign told me it raised $200,000 in just 36 hours around Dodd's announcement that he would put a hold on the current FISA wiretapping legislation and filibuster it if necessary. They're also saying visits to his site are up tenfold as well as email signups, but our Hitwise data doesn't yet show a traffic bump. Other signs...

10/22/2007

We received an email today from Ole Tangen Jr., the English Editor of "The BOBs" telling us that techPresident has been nominated "as one of the best blogs in the world" out of more than 7,000 submitted. Yikes! We're not worthy! Seriously, the Best of the Blogs Awards - The BOBs - is an annual blog competition sponsored by Deutsche Welle, Germany’s international broadcaster (think Germany's BBC). The BOBs consider sites from 10 different languages and claims to be the biggest international blog competition in the world. Tangen wrote: "Your innovative use of the blog form to track the ongoing presidential election has led our users and jury to nominate you for the Best Weblog category." Go here to cast your votes for your...

10/20/2007

There's something brewing on the left side of the web, and it just might mean good news for Chris Dodd's presidential candidacy. Take a look at the bump in his blog mentions on our Technorati chart. The last time he stood out from the second-tier pack anywhere near this much was at the beginning August, when he went on the Bill O'Reilly show and his staff quickly made sure the video circulated at the YearlyKos conference and elsewhere online. Matt Stoller and Chris Bowers are both asking "why not Dodd?" in side-by-side posts on their influential blog OpenLeft, prompted not just by Dodd's promise to filibuster the current FISA bill but also other gutsy (to them) positions he has taken on...

10/20/2007

Here are the highlights of our third full day (Friday, October 19). Ten more video questions came in, and we hit a total more than 12,000 votes from just over 3,500 voters. Roughly speaking, that means we’ve been seeing about 4,000 new votes a day and about 1,200 new voters a day. However, Friday’s web traffic was down from earlier in the week, roughly 3,900 unique visits compared to Thursday’s 7,100. The site’s “top videos” page also saw its first shift in leaders, as a question about “warrantless wiretapping” displaced a question about “transparency” as the top question on the site. A number of blogs have been pointing to that question, which no doubt helps explains the shift. The top sources of...

10/19/2007

Here are the highlights of our second full day out in the world (October 18): More of our co-sponsors chimed in with posts, and we started getting some solid news stories about 10questions as well. (See below.) Over the course of the day, we had more than 7,100 unique visits, a solid increase over our first day, and average time on the site was nearly 2 minutes, with 2.2 pages/visit. There were 29 videos submitted in all, with a total of nearly 8,500 votes cast from 2,300 voters (up from 4,100 yesterday). In sum, things are going well! News coverage: Joe Garofoli, San Francisco Chronicle, http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/10/18/MNDQSRPE1.DTL&type=politics Mark Glaser, PBS Mediashift: http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2007/10/top_5_week_eightytwo.html Steve Johnson, Chicago Tribune: http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/technology_internetcritic/2007/10/weve-already-se.html Sarah Lai Stirland, Wired: http://www.wired.com/politics/onlinerights/news/2007/10/candidate_videos?currentPage=all Linkage from co-sponsors: Blip.tv: http://blog.blip.tv/blog/ BlogHer:...

10/18/2007

10Questions.com had a very successful launch yesterday. At least 20 of our co-sponsors posted about the launch, generating nearly 5,500 unique visits in the first 24 hours (more than half coming between the hours of 7pm and 10pm!). The average visit time was 2.5 minutes and visitors averaged about 2.5 pages per visit. So far we’ve logged about 5,200 votes from about 1,700 voters, from every state, and the rate of multiple vote attempts is down at just 3% of that. We also got some strong and positive pick-ups in online media, including Jose Vargas on the WashPost's Trail blog, Ben Smith’s Politico blog and Danny Glover’s Beltway Blogroll. Smith wrote: The smart site TechPresident just launched, in cooperation with the New York...

10/08/2007

The Web on the Candidates * The Nobel Prizes are due out this week, with the Peace Prize announcement on Friday, and that means speculation about Al Gore's political future is going to rise. Indeed, a glance at our "undecided" chart for blog mentions of Gore (powered by Technorati) shows a spike already for the former VP, Oscar winner and best-selling author. Grass-roots activists for a Gore candidacy appear to have united in a national coalition at America for Gore, and the Washington Times' Christina Bellantoni reports that "state movements to draft Al Gore for a presidential bid are strengthening." * With Facebook holding a "Political Summit" tomorrow at the Hyatt Regency in DC, aimed at educating the political community "how Facebook...

10/03/2007

While a quick glance at the biggest political blogs suggests that none of the presidential candidates have caught fire, lots of political bloggers are declaring their allegiance to a candidate, either with a post or by putting a button or badge on their site. But it's not all that easy to find those blogs. There are a couple of great sites devoted to particular candidates that serve as hubs or aggregators of bloggers devoted to that person. Those include Blogs for Fred (Thompson), RudyBlogs (Giuliani), The 35Percenters (Kucinich), and the DailyPaul (Ron Paul). (And if you google for "blogs for hillary" the top result is a site called Blogs Against Hillary, which has dozens of sites listed in its blogroll. I...

09/27/2007

[Here's a snippet of my and Andrew Rasiej's latest "Politics 2.0" column in the Politico.] Most of the time in American presidential politics, if you’re a voter who doesn’t live in one of the early-primary states, or in one of the handful of major cities that generate serious cash for candidates, the odds of you ever seeing a candidate at this point in the election cycle are pretty low. According to The Washington Post’s “Campaign Tracker” database, Iowa has seen 1,240 candidate events; New Hampshire, 571; South Carolina, 268; California, 238; D.C., 174; Florida, 146; Nevada, 111; and New York, 103.The odds of a candidate coming to a small town in Kentucky, which has neither money nor an early primary, are basically...