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Mark Evans

the blog - examines the world of telecom  and  technology  from  a distinctly Canadian perspective.

the person - lives in Toronto, CA with  his  wife  and  three children, and  works  as director of community with PlanetEye Inc.
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View Article  50M Blogs and Counting....
Dave Sifry has another update on the blogosphere. Technorati is now indexing more than 50 million blogs, and Sifry says the blogosphere is doubling every 200 days. He figures Technorati will be indexing 100 million blogs by February. To put this growth in perspective, the blogosphere is expanding by two blogs a second or 175,000 a day. Some interesting tidbits: more than 40% of blog posts are written in Japanese or Chinese, and 8% of new blogs are splogs. Given the blogosphere's hyper-growth,  the next growth market could be separating the wheat from the chaff. In other words, new tools need to be developed that help people people find the right blogs at the right time. Maybe it's Google Blog Search, maybe's it's Technorati, maybe it's Sphere or maybe it's TheGoodBlogs (note: I've given TheGoodBlogs some unpaid advisory services). Where there is a problem, there's opportunity....
View Article  Why Web 2.0 is Like High School
Dead 2.0 (a new, insightful and deliciously skeptical/quasi-nasty blog) has a very creative post on "Why Web 2.0 is Just Like High School".
View Article  Wordpress On a Roll
When someone wanted to start a blog, the default for a free tool used to be Blogger.com. This status is increasingly being assumed by Wordpress.com (even my brother, Sean, is ready to jump into blogging using Wordpress). According to TechCrunch, Wordpress.com now hosts 300,000 blogs, which receive 1.6 million pages views a day and 14.2 million unique visitors a month - double the amount of traffic since May. For months, Wordpress domo Matt Mullenweg has talked about how his company, Automattic, planned to leverage Wordpress' success by offering premium services. This strategy has started to recently emerge with the introduction an upgrade called Custom CSS, which lets users change the look of their blogs. It's a small step in a strategy that will be a challenge to implement given Wordpress has established itself as a free rather than fee service. To its credit, Wordpress is involving the community with a paid upgrades thread to solicit ideas. Some of the early ideas included Javascript, AdSense, statistical/analytical tools, personal domain names and more hard storage. I've been using Wordpress since last December for All Nortel, All the Time, and really like its simplicity and ease of use. What kind of upgrades would I pay for? Well, Javascript would be a start because it would provide the flexibility to introduce services that Wordpress doesn't offer such as advanced analytics. How much would I pay? Perhaps $1 to $5 a month. It will, no doubt, be interesting to see Wordpress unveils in the coming months, and how many users are actually willing to pay for fee-based services.
Note: For more on Wordpress' first premium service, check out Blog Herald. Om Malik and Niall Kennedy also have a podcast on how new advertising networks are starting to emerge, including Wordpress' recent experimentation with contextual advertising.

View Article  Sneakpeak at Blackberry 8100
Engadget offers up a early-bird look at the much-anticipated Blackberry 8100 - the "pro-summer" device that will come with a camera and the ability to play music and videos.
My blog has moved. Check out the new Mark Evans. It's part of my mini-blog empire that also includes All About Nortel and Twitterrati. You can subscribe to Mark Evans Tech by clicking on the RSS symbol above.
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