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According to David Sifry, Technorati's chief executive, the current number of blogs is now over 8 times bigger than the 500,000 blogs it measured in June, 2003. The company tracked 3 million blogs as of the first week of July, and has added over 1 million blogs to its stable since then. Meanwhile, Pew Internet & American Life reports a new weblog is created every 5.8 seconds. That roughly translates into 15,000 new blogs every day. In an announcement dated November 18, blog-search company PubSub Concepts claims to already monitor over 6.5 million blogs. Perseus Development, meanwhile, estimates by the end of 2004, there will be 10 million blogs, the vast majority already dead. ClickZ interrupted Weblogs Inc. founder Jason McCabe Calacanis' trip to China for another perspective. "There are millions of blogs, but I would say less than 1 million are updated regularly," Calacanis e-mailed. "So less than 1 percent of the country is blogging, but that figure is going to grow over the next five years to some percentage of the folks who e-mail today." While he was über-exuberant enough to predict that percentage will be 50 percent of the number of daily e-mail users by 2009, the point about the number of regularly updated blogs is easier to substantiate.
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According to David Sifry, Technorati's chief executive, the current number of blogs is now over 8 times bigger than the 500,000 blogs it measured in June, 2003. The company tracked 3 million blogs as of the first week of July, and has added over 1 million blogs to its stable since then. Meanwhile, Pew Internet & American Life reports a new weblog is created every 5.8 seconds. That roughly translates into 15,000 new blogs every day. In an announcement dated November 18, blog-search company PubSub Concepts claims to already monitor over 6.5 million blogs. Perseus Development, meanwhile, estimates by the end of 2004, there will be 10 million blogs, the vast majority already dead. ClickZ interrupted Weblogs Inc. founder Jason McCabe Calacanis' trip to China for another perspective. "There are millions of blogs, but I would say less than 1 million are updated regularly," Calacanis e-mailed. "So less than 1 percent of the country is blogging, but that figure is going to grow over the next five years to some percentage of the folks who e-mail today." While he was über-exuberant enough to predict that percentage will be 50 percent of the number of daily e-mail users by 2009, the point about the number of regularly updated blogs is easier to substantiate.
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The Blogosphere By the Numbers › › › Traffic Patterns By Rob McGann | November 22, 2004 The size of the blogosphere has doubled every five months over the last year and a half, according to blog analysis firm Technorati. Over that time, blogs have gone from being a word that sounded insulting to an online trend embraced even by a sexagenarian Massachusetts senator running for president. Given the frenetic pace of that growth, data charting the blog phenomenon have been vigorously consumed, and in some cases contradictory.
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The Blogosphere By the Numbers › › › Traffic Patterns By Rob McGann | November 22, 2004 The size of the blogosphere has doubled every five months over the last year and a half, according to blog analysis firm Technorati. Over that time, blogs have gone from being a word that sounded insulting to an online trend embraced even by a sexagenarian Massachusetts senator running for president. Given the frenetic pace of that growth, data charting the blog phenomenon have been vigorously consumed, and in some cases contradictory.
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The Blogosphere By the Numbers › › › Traffic Patterns By Rob McGann | November 22, 2004 The size of the blogosphere has doubled every five months over the last year and a half, according to blog analysis firm Technorati. Over that time, blogs have gone from being a word that sounded insulting to an online trend embraced even by a sexagenarian Massachusetts senator running for president. Given the frenetic pace of that growth, data charting the blog phenomenon have been vigorously consumed, and in some cases contradictory.
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23 Nov 04
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