~terry
Sun, Sep 22, 1996 (08:49)
seed
The place to let others know about new web pages. And arent' there
thousands of these coming out every day? We can't keep up but maybe we
can scratch the surface a little bit.
~terry
Sun, Sep 22, 1996 (08:57)
#1
I just helped William Meyers put up:
http://www.spring.com/~wmmeyers/
It's got Monday Night Class, Huichol indians, and the Dalai Lama and is
linked to the cultures conference on the Spring:
http://www.spring.com/yapp-bin/public/browse/cultures/all
Some topics:
2 18 Introductions (william)
4 8 saving the world (william)
5 1 Buddhism (william)
6 3 Going South http://www.spring.com/~ssabrina (ssabrina)
7 2 Psychedelic Era (william)
~terry
Sun, Feb 9, 1997 (20:46)
#2
In the business, PC Meter's main notoriety is that it delivers estimates of
sites' reach and frequency--two familiar and useful concepts to the ad
industry. For example, it is very useful for Yahoo to know that, in PC
Meter's latest measurement quarter, 38.5% of the Web audience (as reflected
in PC Meter's sampling approach) visited a Yahoo site. That's a huge selling
point for Yahoo's ad-sales force, which can claim the most reach of any of
the directory/search services. And it's something that Yahoo couldn't
otherwise measure itself.
The other thing that PC Meter delivers is user demographics for sites.
Although most large sites already have info on their users' demographics, PC
Meter's data should be more accurate. That's because most sites get their
user demos by running optional online surveys, which they rarely validate
for representativeness or comparability to other sites' demos. In contrast,
PC Meter's business starts with a panel of users that it validates as
representative in the first place; it then tracks them across all sites with
the same measures. (Or at least that's what they're trying to do. Anytime
someone attempts this, questions arise similar to those accompanying
Nielsen's TV-ratings measurements.)
Independent of whether PC Meter's methodology is better than any given
site's internal user measurements, the other angle with PC Meter is that
it's a neutral third party. Perception-wise, this factor tends to elevate PC
Meter data over that of a site self-reporting its user demographics.
As to why PC Meter gets so much ink, it's because they've got a unique,
continuing, and more-or-less neutral way to fuel "who's up / who's down"
stories.