Thursday 8 December 2011

Steve Job's death broke many records of cyber Traffic (Mian Shakeel Aslam)

Mian Shakeel Aslam--- The death of Apple founder Steve Jobs had to break a wave of grief online file probably, an Australian company said yesterday mourning the Internet was an homage to the tech guru to pay. 


Social media sites fell under the weight of the jobs associated with messages, with five of the top ten topics trends in the world on Twitter about the pioneer of Apple, including # # ThankYouSteve and SADI. 

Two of his catch-cries, "Think Different" and "Stay Hungry" were also high on the trend, with the chatter is so immense that it up to use Twitter, the posting of his famous "Fail Whale" to show a traffic jam caused. 

Social Media analysts said it was likely to include records for the most talked about event ever internet, estimated SR7 watchdog that he made a massive 10 000 tweets per second and was likely to increase to break. 

Said "It has the potential to time, all social media interactivity level, especially on the Twitter platform, where it will be probably more than 10 000 tweets per second," Peter Fraser, co-founder of the Australian Social Media SR7 Monitoring Agency . 

"We expect that Twitter will be released officially, but from the numbers that we were followed by days since the announcement, it is certainly a tendency to break that record." 

This file - 8868 tweets per second - was set when the American singer Beyonce has her pregnancy at the MTV Awards announced. 

In comparison, the killing of Osama bin Laden to see about 5,000 tweets per second, and Michael Jackson in 2009 on the death of about 493 products tweets per second. 

The number of Twitter users and the traffic volume is much lower at the time, and Jackson stations were still enough to bring the site to crash. 

Fraser said the reaction to the death of employment "is an" extraordinary phenomenon, driven "by news of a record number of celebrities, politicians and other influential personalities - each with a huge online following its own. 

"What you see on all platforms is a remarkable degree of interactivity," he said. 

"If you look at the kind of people who watch the commentary ... it is a wealth of very influential people in the world, all of them have large following in their own right to actually use this momentum." 

And it was not likely, but have reached their peak, he added, with news late at night in the United States. 

"One would expect that the trend picks up again when the world comes online," said Fraser. 

Posted By: Mian Shakeel Aslam

Source: http://news.ninemsn.com.au/technology/8356719/jobs-death-to-smash-internet-re...

No comments:

Post a Comment