| Twitter not so popular with the young people August 7, 2009 at 1:58 pm |
| Twitter has a reputation as that "new Internet trend" that's all the rage among kids, but recent data suggests that an older crowd is what's really driving Twitter's growth. Sparked by a very unscientific Morgan Stanley report (PDF) about how teens apparently don't use Twitter, market research powerhouse Nielsen decided to take a look at its own data from a NetRatings panel of over 250,000 US Internet users. While "teens don't tweet" is a pretty gross generalization of the data, the young'uns don't make up as significant of a group as one might expect. According to Nielsen's data, Twitter reached 10.7 percent of all active Internet users in 2009 "despite a lack of widespread adoption by children, teens, and young adults." The firm notes that people under the age of 25 make up almost a quarter of all US Internet users and yet only 16 percent of Twitter's audience in June of 2009, meaning that Twitter is "under-indexing" the youth market compared to the Internet as a whole. Conversely, the large majority of Twitter users (64 percent) fell into the 25 to 54 age group, and 20 percent were 55+. That's right: there were more Twitter users who are our parents' age than those who are in high school or college. 
 
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| The Smoking Gun exposes PrankNet as Internet badboys cower August 7, 2009 at 12:15 pm |
| The Smoking Gun this week released the results of its lengthy investigation into PrankNet, an online community specializing in disturbing phone pranks. The operators operated under a veil of anonymity, covering their tracks and using Skype to place non-traceable phone calls. When TSG eventually exposed the ringleader as a young man living in Canada, however, the results were predictably pathetic. On July 21, a pair of TSG reporters approached "Dex"'s building at 1637 Assumption Street in Windsor, where he lives in the ground-floor 'B' apartment. Calling to his mother, who was standing near an open living room window, a reporter asked her to summon her son. The woman disappeared into "Dex"'s adjoining bedroom, where the pair could be heard whispering. Despite repeated requests to come out and speak with TSG, "Dex" hid with his mother in his bedroom, the windows of which were covered with plastic shopping bags, a towel, and one black trash bag. As the sun set and his room darkened, "Dex" did not reach to turn on a light. The notorious Internet Tough Guy, who has gleefully used the telephone to cause all kinds of havoc, was now himself panicking. He had been found. And, as a result, was barricaded in Pranknet World Headquarters with his mom, while two reporters loitered outside his window and curious neighbors wondered what was up. 
 
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| PayPal come now be used to purchase 360 content, US only August 7, 2009 at 11:37 am |
| For those leery of using their credit card online, Microsoft has introduced a new method of payment for Xbox Live. PayPal can now be used to purchase Microsoft Points, the form of currency used in the Xbox marketplace. Users simply add a PayPal account to their payment options in the same way they would add a credit card. And while this is great news for PayPal users, it does come with a few drawbacks. Firstly, the service is only available to those in the US. Secondly, PayPal can only be used to purchase points on Xbox.com, not via an Xbox 360. You can, however, set up multiple PayPal accounts with one Xbox Live account. It's always great to have options, so the addition of PayPal as a form of payment is good news. And combined with the recent advent of XBLA games being made available on Amazon, it gives gamers plenty of choice for how they want to purchase their games. Now let's just hope Microsoft eventually rolls out these services in other regions as well.  
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| Blizzcon tickets sell out in just 8 minutes August 7, 2009 at 10:40 am |
| Blizzard Entertainment's semi-annual Blizzcon convention—celebrating all things Warcraft, Starcraft, and Diablo—is set to get underway later this month, and tickets are already sold out. In fact, according to Activision Blizzard, the 20,000 tickets for the event were all sold in an astounding eight minutes. Tickets to the convention were $125, more than either Comic Con or PAX. But for those who missed out, the event is also going to be available to watch via pay-per-view. Direct TV is offering over 16 hours of live footage from the two-day event for $39.95. As an added bonus, anyone who either purchased a ticket or buys the programming on TV will receive a free in-game companion for World of Warcraft: Grunty the Murloc Marine. This demand for tickets isn't something new; in fact, last year Blizzard went through some frustrating site problems due to the massive number of people trying to purchase tickets. This year's event takes place at the Anaheim Convention Center, from August 21-22.  
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| Crowdsourcing the semantics of numbers with True # August 7, 2009 at 7:11 am |
| Words have obvious meanings to most users, and even when knowledge fails, there's an obvious method to compensate: look it up. Numbers also have semantic values, but they're a lot harder to work with. Most of us can probably recognize 3.14159 and the conceptual baggage it carries, but how many of us would recognize 58.44? (That's a mole of sodium chloride, in grams, for the curious.) And the response that would work for words—look it up—doesn't work so conveniently for numbers. Only one of the top-10 hits in Google refers to salt, and Bing fails entirely (though it does offer "Women's Sexy Mini Skirts by VENUS"). Clearly, we haven't figured out how to make the Web work for numbers in the same way it does for words. Allen Razdow, who got his start developing MathCad, wants to change that, and he talked to Ars about his attempt, True #. Radzow said he was inspired by all the effort put into the semantic Web, which provides a variety of annotation and data exchange formats for information. The new company is providing a service that allows users to create HTML snippets that link back to a full description of the number; these can be embedded in various document formats, like Word and PDF, and the company is offering plugins for embedding numbers from within Word, Acrobat, Eclipse, and Visual Studio. There will be a public database of numbers made available for free, or firms can pay to host a server for internal figures. 
 
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