الاثنين، 11 مارس 2013

Pheed: The Next Social Craze for Teens?

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Mashable
Monday, March 11, 2013
SOCIAL MEDIA TOP STORIES
Digital-media-resources145 Digital Media Resources You May Have Missed
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Spring-breakers-sxswSXSWi Day 2: WWE, Work/Life Balance and the 'Spring Breakers' Premiere
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Texas-twitterSXSW Day 1: Top Tweets, Trends and Photos
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ALL STORIES SOCIAL MEDIA

Pheed: The Next Social Craze for Teens?
Sunday, March 10, 2013 6:28 PMAmy-Mae Elliott
Have you sent your first "Pheed" yet? Launched late last year, Pheed is a new social media platform that lets you share text, photos, videos and audio. Propelled by teenage users, Pheed topped the App Store's social networking category in late February. Though the company says the app is not just for teens, Pheed told Mashable the user base is 81% between age 14 and 25.

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RebelMouse: How to Create Your Personalized Social Front Page
Sunday, March 10, 2013 5:17 PMAmy-Mae Elliott


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SimpleWash, the Easiest Way to Clean Up Your Facebook Page
Sunday, March 10, 2013 4:45 PMThe Daily Muse
Whether you're job searching or have a pending friend request from your boss, it's a good idea to clean up your social media profiles every once in a while. After all, even if you're pretty militant about what gets posted publicly, things can slip through the cracks (i.e., that Throwback Thursday photo from freshman year you didn't realize you were tagged in).

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SXSW Day 2: The Top Social Buzz
Sunday, March 10, 2013 12:48 PMBob Al-Greene
With South by Southwest in full swing, what were the most-buzzed about topics in Austin on Saturday? The answer sounds like a David Bowie song: a party on Mars. With almost all buzz coming from Twitter, the most popular topic by far was the party scene at SXSW. Al Gore retained some of his social heat from the day before, when he defended his choice to sell Current TV to Al Jazeera on a panel in Austin.

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Wealth Inequality, Facebook Redesign Spark This Week's Hot Discussions
Sunday, March 10, 2013 12:00 PMJessica Fee
Wealth inequality is currently a topic of much debate, so when this video showed the difference between the reality and the perception of wealth distribution, it quickly went viral. Through an infographic-style animation, the video visualizes the findings of a Harvard Business School professor and economist, after he asked more than 5,000 Americans how they thought wealth was distributed in the U.S.

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