DOI: 10.1145/2001269.2001272
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contributed;article
DOI: 10.1145/2001269.2001297
Don’t turn social media into
another ‘Literary Digest’ Poll
Daniel Gayo-Avello
Content published in microblogging
systems like Twitter can be data-mined
to take the pulse of society. Indeed, a
number of studies have praised the value of
relatively simple approaches to sampling,
opinion mining, and sentiment analysis.
In this article, the author plays devil’s
advocate, detailing a study conducted
in late 2008/early 2009 in which such
simple approaches largely overestimated
President Barack Obama’s victory in the
2008 U.S. Presidential election. The author
conducts a post-mortem of the analysis,
extracting several important lessons.
Twitter is a microblogging service for
publishing very short text messages (only
140 characters each), or tweets, to be
shared with users following their author.
Many Twitter users do not protect their
tweets, which then appear in the so-called
public timeline. They are accessible
through Twitter’s own API, so are easily
accessed and collected.
Twitter’s original slogan—“What are
you doing?”—encouraged users to share
updates about the minutia of their daily
activities with their friends. Twitter has
since evolved into a complex information-dissemination platform, especially during
situations of mass convergence. Under
certain circumstances, Twitter users not
only provide information about themselves
but also real-time updates of current
events.
Today, Twitter is a source of
information on such events, updated by
millions of users worldwide reacting to
events as they unfold, often in real time.
It was only a matter of time before the
research community turned to it as a rich
source of social, commercial, marketing,
and political information.
The goal of this article is to focus
on one of the survey’s most appealing
applications: using its data to predict the
outcome of current and future events.
contributed;article
DOI: 10.1145/2001269.2001298
computing for the masses
Zhiwei Xu and Guojie Li
The fields of computer science and
engineering have witnessed amazing
progress over the last 60 years. As we
journey through the second decade of
the 21st century, however, it becomes
increasingly clear that our profession faces
some serious challenges. We can no longer
solely rely on incremental and inertial
advances. Fundamental opportunities and
alternative paths must be examined.
In 2007, the Chinese Academy of
Sciences (CAS) sponsored a two-year
study on the challenges, requirements,
and potential roadmaps for information
technology advances into year 2050. This
article presents a perspective on a key
finding of that study: A new paradigm,
named computing for the masses, is needed
to cope with the challenges facing IT in
the coming decades.
The CAS study focused on China’s
needs. However, the issues investigated
are of interest to the worldwide computing
community. For instance, when
considering the drivers of future computing
profession, it is critical not to underestimate
the requirements and demands from
the new generations of digital native
population. As of July 2010, 59% of China’s
420 million Internet users were between
the ages of 6–29 years old. The time frame
of 2010–2050 is not too distant a future for
them. These digital natives could drive a
ten-fold expansion of IT use.
Computing for the masses is much
more than offering a cheap personal
computer and Internet connection to
the low-income population. It means
providing essential computing value for
all people, tailored to their individual
needs. It demands paradigm-shifting
research and discipline rejuvenation
in computer science, to create
augmented Value (V), Affordability (A),
and Sustainability (S) through Ternary
computing ( T). In other words, computing
for the masses is VAST computing.
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