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        <title>Overskrift.dk seneste indlęg for tag: messaging</title>
        <description>De seneste posts fra danske RSS feeds og weblogs på Overskrift.dk om tag'et messaging</description>
        <link>http://www.overskrift.dk</link>
        <lastBuildDate>Tue, 20 Mar 2012 18:01:51 +0100</lastBuildDate>
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            <title>Overskrift.dk logo</title>
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            <description>Overskrift.dk</description>
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        <docs>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss</docs>
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        <item>
            <title>What To Tweet And Not To Tweet About [Study]</title>
            <link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/mindjumpers/~3/b-u2PteAc2s/</link>
            <description>TweetRecently researchers from Carnegie Mellon University, MIT and Georgia Tech conducted a study to understand the Twitter behavior of 1,443 Twitter users who rated 43,738 tweets during a 19-day period. Results showed that only 36% of tweets are worth reading, 39% are mediocre at best, and 25% of tweets are not worth reading at all.
But the question is why people don?t find value in the tweets? In the following post, I will use the survey findings to highlight which kind of tweets people like on Twitter and why.
What do people say about different tweets:
Here is a chart that displays the attitude of towards different types of tweets.

As apparent from the chart, readers show most interest in content based on links and questions &amp;#8211; basically the kind of content that allows fellow tweeters to engage with you and your brand.
Tweets like just a short update about your mood or lifestyle regularly leaves no room for further communication. It is always good to supplement it with elaboration of the facts that people care about and allows them to engage with it.
For example:
Such a long day at work, ugh.
and
Such a long day at work; looking for a new social media campaign thanks @mindjumpers for coming up with great ideas.
With the growth in location based marketing, a lot of tweets are now related to check-ins. Occasional public check-ins create value if they&amp;#8217;re accompanied with information followers can benefit from &amp;#8211; like sharing information about a sale going on at a local store, or tweeting something insightful from the keynote speaker at an event.
Things that are good to tweet about: 
 

Linking to content: Talking about content, whether your own or others&amp;#8217;, in your tweets is key to starting conversations and help you in gaining new followers. Twitter is one of the best tools to share knowledge and input and hear other people&amp;#8217;s opinions about it. Including lines from a blog post or your opinion on what you read, along with a link to that content is a great way to derive value from Twitter.
Asking questions: Another way of interacting with people is to ask questions and let people give their opinions. Posting a question could be a great way to start discussions, build relationships and also get instant feedback.
Offers and promotions: Twitter is an excellent way to promote offers, events, coupons and customer generating content. Social media followers expect brands to tout their offers, and it&amp;#8217;s one of the reasons they&amp;#8217;re following you.
Data and research: Twitter users love data, infographics and research figures. It is a great way to spread your research findings and your thoughts. What&amp;#8217;s easier than a RT with a piece of compelling data or original research?

All said and done, it is good to maintain a mix of different kinds of tweets from your brand. Although, lot of people do not prefer an overload of personal updates as well as check ins, you don&amp;#8217;t have to leave them out completely. It is good to balance out your tweets with a strong focus on the suggestions mentioned in the list above.

Similar Posts:

Facts About Consumer Behaviour on Twitter [Study]
What Can Brands Learn From Lady Gaga&amp;#8217;s Twitter Growth
All You Need To Know About Your Facebook Reach [Study]





</description>
            <author>Charu Dwivedi</author>
            <source url="http://www.mindjumpers.com/blog/feed/">Mindjumpers</source>
            <pubDate>Tue, 20 Mar 2012 10:45:49 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Samsung ChatON now available as web-based messaging client</title>
            <link>http://marketingdebat.dk/samsung-chaton-now-available-as-web-based-messaging-client/</link>
            <description> ChatON is Samsung&amp;#8217;s mobile messaging platform available for Bada, Android, BlackBerry and, yes, iOS phones. Now it&amp;#8217;s pulled the sheets from the web-based version of the service that allows you to message your frenemies from the comfort of your desktop. As well as short messages, you&amp;#8217;ll get group chat, multimedia sending, profile pages and buddy charts to let you know who your BFFs are
Continued here:
Samsung ChatON now available as web-based messaging client
</description>
            <author>admin</author>
            <source url="http://www.marketingdebat.dk/?feed=rss2">Marketingdebat</source>
            <pubDate>Tue, 28 Feb 2012 12:24:00 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Premium Messaging Market ? A2P SMS Market, P2A SMS Market : Global Analysis, Trends, Size and ...</title>
            <link>http://www.businesswirenews.com/premium-messaging-market-a2p-sms-market-p2a-sms-market-global-analysis-trends-size-and-forecast-2007-2017/</link>
            <description>Premium messaging is an opportunity which opens up an additional revenue stream for mobile network operators as the value added services which they offer to customers are chargeable over and above the standard rate SMS or MMS. As the mobile network operators have a wide customer base; they make use of these value added services increases the APRU (Average Revenue per User). Customers prefer to access these services as they are user friendly provide, value to customer and are exciting.
Browse All Report: Premium Messaging Market
Premium messaging is segmented into Premium SMS (PSMS) and Premium MMS (PMMS) with the earlier commanding the most of the market volume and revenue. There would be a slight shift of revenue concentration from PSMS to PMMS as a result of penetration of camera mobile phones and reducing PMMS prices. Entertainment is the most popular premium SMS services segment, which includes songs, videos and games, ringtones and TV voting. The global premium messaging market volume is expected to reach 1,134.2 Billion by the year 2017 at a CAGR of 36.8% from 2012 to 2017.
Scope and overview
The objective of the study on ?Premium Messaging Market: Global Analysis and Forecast? is to gain detailed market insights in premium messaging segments. The market is analyzed on the basis of growth trends, ongoing developments, market penetration and revenue share.
 Browse: A2P SMS Market
Segmentation &amp;amp; Analysis
The report segments and analyzes the ?Premium Messaging Market: Global Analysis and Forecast? on the basis of following sub-categories:
? Geographic Markets
o North America
o South America
o EMEA
o APAC
This section provides in-depth analysis of ?Premium Messaging Market? that includes market size and growth forecast for each geography and segments.
? By Segment
o Premium SMS (PSMS)
o Premium MMS (PMMS)
? By Origin (or Termination)
o A2P (Application to Person)
o P2A (Person to Application)
This section provides in-depth analysis of Premium Messaging market size and growth forecast for each segment and challenges prevailing in the overall market levels and future outlook for all the levels.
Browse: P2A SMS Market
? By Industry Verticals (at country level)
? Entertainment
? Media, Advertising and Publications
? Retail
? Banking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI)
? Hospitality and Tourism
? Shipping and Logistics
? Outsourcing &amp;amp; ?Call Centers
http://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/premium-messaging-market.html
Incoming search terms:Premium Messaging Market</description>
            <author>netajirsirsat</author>
            <source url="http://www.businesswirenews.com/feed">Business Wire News</source>
            <pubDate>Tue, 14 Feb 2012 10:16:56 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>The duality of request/reply vs. publish/subscribe #2</title>
            <link>http://mookid.dk/oncode/archives/2683</link>
            <description>In my last post, I described how the mechanics of publish/subscribe actually mirror those of request/reply.
In this post, I&amp;#8217;ll look at the two operation from another angle: What do they mean?
What does it mean when you bus.Send?
Sending means either that the sender wants to

Command that another service does something.
Request that another service does something, and yields one or more replies1.

This means that the sender knows stuff about the other service, but that other service will most likely not know or care about who&amp;#8217;s sending. In other words, the sender depends on that other service!
What does it mean when you bus.Publish?
Publishing means that the publisher wants to

Broadcast an event that contains information on something that has happened.

This means that the publisher most likely does stuff inside itself, maybe updates some internal state, and then goes on and publishes information on some aspect of what has happened. In doing this, the publisher will most likely not know or care about who&amp;#8217;s receiving. In other words, the subscriber depends on the publisher!
Summing it up with a picture
Consider this illustration, where service dependencies are shown with arrows:

Again, see how comparing Send to Publish is actually like comparing two mirror images when the other mirror image is upside-down?



Note that the request/reply pattern may impose unwanted temporal coupling in an architecture and should probably be used only in integration scenarios orchestrated by a saga. &amp;#8617;


Related Posts:The duality of request/reply vs. publish/subscribe #1NServiceBus for dummies who want to be smarties 6Getting Express to show flash messagesNServiceBus for dummies who want to be smarties 5Simple and pragmatic event bus with Castle Windsor</description>
            <author>mookid</author>
            <source url="http://mookid.dk/oncode/feed">mookid on code</source>
            <pubDate>Mon, 23 Jan 2012 10:00:14 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>The duality of request/reply vs. publish/subscribe #1</title>
            <link>http://mookid.dk/oncode/archives/2660</link>
            <description>A misconception I often meet in relation to messaging frameworks like NServiceBus and Rebus, is this: Where do messages go? 
The confusion often comes from comparing how bus.Publish works with how bus.Send works.
In this post, I&amp;#8217;d like to describe the two operations and show that they are mirror images of each other &amp;#8211; except maybe not as much a mirror image as a transposition.
Sending messages
In the case where you&amp;#8217;re doing a bus.Send(message), the answer is trivial: The message gets sent to the endpoint specified in the sender&amp;#8217;s enpoint mapping for that message type. Let&amp;#8217;s say our sender is equipped with this snippet of XML1 in its app.config:

&amp;lt;UnicastBusConfig&amp;gt;
  &amp;lt;MessageEndpointMappings&amp;gt;
    &amp;lt;add Messages=&amp;quot;MyService.Messages&amp;quot; Endpoint=&amp;quot;my_service&amp;quot;/&amp;gt;
  &amp;lt;/MessageEndpointMappings&amp;gt;
&amp;lt;/UnicastBusConfig&amp;gt;

If we assume that message is an instance of a class from the MyService.Messages assembly, in this case a bus.Send(message) will be translated into bus.Send(&quot;my_service&quot;, message).
Publishing messages
But where do messages go when they&amp;#8217;re published? Well, they go to whomever subscribed to that particular message type &amp;#8211; and with NServiceBus (and, for that matter, with Rebus as well) subscribers get subscribed by sending some kind of subscription message, which is basically saying: &amp;#8220;Hey there, mr. Publisher &amp;#8211; I&amp;#8217;m some_subscriber, and I&amp;#8217;d like to subscribe to MyService.Messages.SomeParticularMessage&amp;#8220;.
From this point on, the publisher will store the mapping of the message type along with the subscriber&amp;#8217;s address, allowing a bus.Publish(message) method to be implemented something along the lines of

public void Publish&amp;#40;object message&amp;#41;
&amp;#123;
    foreach&amp;#40;var subscriberEndpoint in GetSubscribersFor&amp;#40;message.GetType&amp;#40;&amp;#41;&amp;#41;&amp;#41;
    &amp;#123;
        Send&amp;#40;subscriberEndpoint, message&amp;#41;;
    &amp;#125;
&amp;#125;

So &amp;#8211; how do we understand this on a higher level, allowing us to never ever confuse these things again? Let&amp;#8217;s dive into&amp;#8230;
The duality
Consider these two sequence-like diagrams:

See how request/reply and publish/subscribe are actually the same patterns? The reason these two are often confused, is that the Send operation is often countered by Publish, when in fact it would be more fitting to see the subscription message (i.e. subscription request) as the counterpart of Send. Thus, Publishing is more like replying. And thus, Send is actually the transposition of Publish.
Now, when you realize this, you&amp;#8217;re never going to confuse these things again   In the next post, I&amp;#8217;ll touch a little bit on another difference between Send and Publish.



The snippet is an endpoint mapping in NServiceBus format, which can also be understood by Rebus when it&amp;#8217;s running with the DetermineDestinationFromNServiceBusEndpointMappings implementation of IDetermineDestination &amp;#8617;


Related Posts:NServiceBus for dummies who want to be smarties 6NServiceBus for dummies who want to be smarties 3NServiceBus for dummies who want to be smarties 1Simple and pragmatic event bus with Castle WindsorNServiceBus for dummies who want to be smarties 5</description>
            <author>mookid</author>
            <source url="http://mookid.dk/oncode/feed">mookid on code</source>
            <pubDate>Fri, 20 Jan 2012 22:46:44 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Motorola Theory ? A Great Messaging Device</title>
            <link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/a1etechreviews/~3/B6qIoWkvRh4/</link>
            <description>Motorola Theory is a stylish messaging Smartphone, which offers thin and compact design, great QWERTY keyboard; better call quality, good display, Bluetooth, browsing, IM &amp;amp; email functionality. By using Motorola Theory you will get better option of talking and texting, and taking advantage of Boost Mobile?s low calling rates. The Theory is a good Smartphone for modern generation that response texting as second language with Bluetooth, QWERTY keyboard and 2.4 inch bright display touchscreen. Boost Mobile developed the messaging phone giving this year with launching Motorola Clutch +i475 with Theory. It looks like Clutch + i475 but does not have featured called push to talk but designed with 1.3 megapixel camera. It is well-mannered smartphone with affectionate QWERTY keyboard.

The features of Motorola Theory seemed designed like Clutch +i475, 0.5 inch broad, high 4.4 inches and wide length is just around 2.4 inches while round corners and soft touch made in back edge. The front edge is glossy dark gray, which gives an effective appearance to the handset. The Motorola Theory has 2.4 inch bright screen that allow users to use 262,000 colors with pixel resolution of 320 x 240, which is unquestionably clear, sharper  than the Clutch +1475?s 220 x 176 pixel resolution display. It lets user to adjust all essential menu like font menu size, banner text, backlight time,  brightness level, wallpaper and clock format based on their choice. Under the touchscreen you will notice a regular standard navigation array, which made in two pliable buttons, enthusiastic camera and back key with encircling closure with in between center Select key.
The Power/end buttons of Motorola Theory and send buttons are on either edge of array. It has QWERTY keyboard features, which is fairly cramped. The number keys are made on white color, the spacebar is quite roomy. Also the keyboard features speakerphone key. On the back edge of device the camera lens placed, while 2.5mm headphone jack and micro USB port on the left part of Theory. Motorola has added volume rocker button on the right edge of Theory. You will easily store 1000 phonebook entry, street address, email-numbers, instant message and webpage URL. According your needs you can arrange your contact group. The advanced point you will noticed in Motorola Theory is caller id for image, message alert tones and 16 polyphonic.
The core features on Motorola Theory consists of alarm clock, datebook, world clock, speakerphone, calculator, vibrate mode, notepad and many more. Also it has featured like Web browser, Bluetooth, voice commands and GPS with TeleNav. Being a standard messaging phone, it designed with text messaging and multimedia with lined conversation shore up, email and instant messaging. The email function support s Pop/IMAP, Yahoo accounts, Gmail, AOL and windows Live. The nice-looking 1.3 megapixel camera let you take image in four resolutions with four setting shutter tones with self timer, silent choice, up to 4x zoom, color effects, picture frames, white and brightness balance. The photo quality is not too good, and appears slight dark, small and blurry mainly in low light.
The additional normal feature of Motorola Theory are imap/pop3 email support via IM/email applications wireless webmail access to MSN, Yahoo and Gmail, Full QWERTY keyboard along with soft keys, 2.40 inch TFT screen, 320 x 240 pixel resolution, 262, colors, 1.3 megapixel camera, digital zoom, music player like AMR, WMA, MP4, MP3, AAC; callers group, rind id and picture id and many more.

     
</description>
            <author>pravakar</author>
            <source url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/a1etechreviews">Gadget Reviews</source>
            <pubDate>Sat, 24 Dec 2011 06:58:30 +0100</pubDate>
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