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Blog News, reviews and cool stuff from the FestBuzz team.

Tweet your reviews!

Posted by Steven on August 6, 2009

Edinburgh Festival poster

Hello! You’ve prob­a­bly come to this post from the @FestBuzz Twit­ter page, in which case you prob­a­bly know your way around Twit­ter already (if not, check here).

We’ll be pick­ing up on show review tweets through­out the Fes­ti­val. We’ve got the com­plete list­ings for the entire Fes­ti­val, so if it’s on — we’ve got it covered.

Just use Twit­ter as you would nor­mally do, include the name of the show and let the world know what you think. If you’ve got space in your mes­sage, include the #Fes­t­Buzz hash­tag, which will make dou­bly cer­tain we pick up your tweet.

Check this tweet for a good example.

What makes us spe­cial is that once we’ve seen your tweet, our unique sen­ti­ment analy­sis engine will judge how pos­i­tive or neg­a­tively your mes­sage is (you’d be suprised how dif­fi­cult that is!) and then uses it to cre­ate demo­c­ra­tic rat­ings for each show.

Then make sure you check out the Fes­t­Buzz web­site before you choose the next show to see.

The Fes­ti­val tweets are already start­ing to flow so we look for­ward to see­ing yours!

Image from Fes­t­Buzz Flickr stream

It wisnae us!

Posted by Steven on August 6, 2009

You might have noticed that Twit­ter encoun­tered a slight prob­lem today and was out of action for a few hours. Well, I’d just like to reas­sure the Fes­t­Buzz fol­low­ers that - it wis­nae us!

The prob­lem was a Dis­trib­uted Denial of Ser­vice Attack (DDoS), so the cul­prits were likely some kids with too much time on their hands.

Any­way, while almost every­thing to do with Twit­ter was inac­ces­si­ble, it was still pos­si­ble to read tweets for a while using the Twit­ter Search page. What was inter­est­ing is that it was still pos­si­ble to post tweets by send­ing them in as text mes­sages.

So if inter­na­tional cyber-warware erupts again dur­ing the Fes­ti­val, fear not! You can still send your review tweets in by text mes­sage and we’ll pick them up once a cease-fire is declared! Just go to the devices page in Twit­ter and reg­is­ter your phone num­ber. You’ll then have to send a unique code once to ver­ify your phone num­ber. After that you can send tweets to your account by send­ing a text. Just be sure to store Twitter’s phone num­ber in your phone.

In other news we’ve started pick­ing up lots of show review tweets! We’re just tight­en­ing a few nuts and blots here and there on our unique sen­ti­ment analy­sis engine, but we’ll be ready to start giv­ing you the word on the tweet soon. Watch this space!

/edit OK, ummm, so I decided to wipe my mobile phone num­ber from Twit­ter and set it up again, just to make sure it was as easy as I remem­bered. But it seems like Twit­ter text *is* bro­ken now! They’re still recov­er­ing from the DDoS attack. I sus­pect any mes­sages sent will get through even­tu­ally, but it *was* work­ing ear­lier when all else was fail­ing. Ho-hum, such is the Internet.

How to become a FestBuzz reviewer (in 140 characters)

Posted by Steven on August 5, 2009

Yes­ter­day I posted a full guide to get­ting involved with Twit­ter at the Edin­burgh Festival.

To be fair it wasn’t the short­est of posts, which is a bit ironic really, so for those of you with Twitter-like atten­tion spans, here is my easy guide to becom­ing a Fes­t­Buzz reviewer in 140 characters:

Become a #fes­t­buzz reviewer: 1)Visit www.Twitter.com 2)Register 3)Register phone 4)Go to Fes­ti­val show 5)Enjoy(or not) 6)Tweet review by txt

and here is my tweet to prove it.

(remem­ber if you’re send­ing a tweet by txt, to make your review 140 char­ac­ters or less and include the show name!)

Look­ing for­ward to see­ing the tweets pour in!

What is this “Twitter” thing anyway?

Posted by Steven on August 4, 2009

Twitter bird

You’ve maybe come along to the Fes­t­Buzz web­site to look for Edin­burgh Fes­ti­val show reviews after meet­ing one of our team out in the streets of Edin­burgh, or maybe you’ve been encour­aged to “tweet” your opin­ion about a show you’ve just seen. You might have read about Twit­ter recently or heard it men­tioned on the news but been left won­der­ing, “What is this Twit­ter thing anyway?”

So what is it then?

Twit­ter is real-time mes­sag­ing, or “micro-blogging”, in mes­sages of 140 char­ac­ters or less. Unlike the more estab­lished “blog­ging”, on Twit­ter there’s no room for ram­bling (such as in this post!). So basi­cally you write a short mes­sage, click a but­ton, then it’s pub­lished on your pro­file page at Twitter.com. Like this chap for example.

As you send Twit­ter mes­sages, or “tweets” as they’re usu­ally called, you build up a chrono­log­i­cal time­line of mes­sages. You can fol­low other Twit­ter users and in turn be fol­lowed your­self. The tweets of all the peo­ple you are fol­low­ing appear in your per­sonal time­line as they are sent, just as your tweets appear in the time­lines of those peo­ple that are fol­low­ing you. The result is a flow of real-time mes­sages from those peo­ple that you follow.

Why bother?

Fair ques­tion! I think the answer to that depends on who you ask — Twit­ter rep­re­sents dif­fer­ent things to dif­fer­ent peo­ple. For me it rep­re­sents a stream of con­scious­ness for the Internet.

Twit­ter used to say it was ask­ing the ques­tion, “What are you doing?” To me, it’s really about “What am I think­ing?” When you really want to share some­thing with more than just the near­est per­son you can find, you can tell Twit­ter and instantly you have told the world.

Twit­ter can be great for shar­ing opin­ions about things (like Edin­burgh Fes­ti­val shows!), shar­ing news sto­ries, inter­est­ing web­sites or even ask­ing for help with some­thing. If you’ve ever fan­cied hav­ing your writ­ings on the Inter­net, but don’t have the time or the incli­na­tion to write a blog reg­u­larly (like myself), then Twit­ter is for you!

How do I get started?

The eas­i­est way to start is to pop over to Twitter.com, pick a user­name and reg­is­ter an account. You can do this from your com­puter or from a web-enabled mobile phone. Once you’ve reg­is­tered there are a few dif­fer­ent ways you can use Twit­ter. When I’m on my com­puter I tend to just use the web­site, but many peo­ple use one of the desk­top appli­ca­tions such as Tweet­deck. They offer extra fea­tures, such as being able to group the peo­ple you fol­low in to groups, e.g. come­di­ans, politi­cians, jour­nal­ists, peo­ple I actu­ally know in real life, etc.

Twit­ter can also be used from mobile phones in one of a cou­ple of ways. Once you’re in your account, you can reg­is­ter your mobile phone num­ber and send tweets via text (SMS) mes­sages sent to a spe­cial num­ber. If you’ve got a smart­phone, you can use one of the many Twit­ter appli­ca­tions out there. I use Twit­ter­Berry on my Black­berry and Twit­ter­fon on my iPhone.

Any­thing else I need to know?

It helps to under­stand another few things — replies, retweets and hashtags.

Replies involve using the “@” char­ac­ter before a person’s user­name in a mes­sage. You can do it with a new mes­sage to “men­tion” some­one or to reply to one of their tweets. They then get alerted that some­one has replied (or men­tioned) to them. The web­site and all the appli­ca­tions help you do this. Exam­ple from @stephenfry: @mjpeanut Well, it pre­sented Wal­ter as a kind of con­cep­tual artist. there was nudity, weird­ness and avant garde bonkersosity.

Retweets are when you want to repeat some­thing some­one has tweeted. Per­haps because you agree with it and want your fol­low­ers to the see the mes­sage, whilst still acknowl­edg­ing the orig­i­nal author. To do this you just copy the orig­i­nal mes­sage, include an “@” reply to the author and put “RT” at the start of your mes­sage. Again, most appli­ca­tions will help you do this. Exam­ple from @kejames: RT @Astro_127 Just landed in Hous­ton. Look­ing for­ward to see­ing fam­ily, friends, and colleagues.

Hash­tags are a way of indi­cat­ing that your tweet is about a topic. You can make up any hash­tag you like by putting a “#” in front of a word. Peo­ple very quickly start using the same hash­tags for promi­nent topics.Example from @WEWS AP: A judge has granted Kather­ine Jack­son a monthly allowance from her son’s estate. #MichaelJackson.

How do I send my show review to FestBuzz?

Sim­ples! Our lit­tle army of robots is scour­ing Twit­ter look­ing for men­tions of fes­ti­val shows. Just send a tweet, say­ing what you thought of the show and include the name of the show. To be extra cer­tain that we pick it up, please use the #Fes­t­Buzz hash­tag.

I said before that Twit­ter can be a bit like a stream of con­scious­ness. Well, the cur­rent can get a lit­tle strong some­times so Fes­t­buzz will be read­ing all these tweets then using our unique soft­ware to under­stand the emo­tion in them so we can auto­mat­i­cally assign rat­ings to shows. Clever, eh?

Is that it?

Aye, that’s about it. Just give it a go! Start by fol­low­ing a few peo­ple (Stephen Fry seems to be the UK’s biggest Twit­ter celebrity). You don’t have to be send­ing tweets every day to take part — just send them as and when you have some­thing to share. Of course you should fol­low Fes­t­Buzz, you can fol­low me if you like (no great insights there!) and check out Jen­nie Lees, the brains behind Festbuzz.

and finally…

Twit­ter is great for shar­ing links to inter­est­ing web­pages, but 140 char­ac­ters can eas­ily be taken up by a long URL. There are sev­eral ser­vices, such as bit.ly, which will take long URLs and shorten them to some­thing more man­age­able and Twit­ter friendly (you can also post directly to Twit­ter from within bit.ly).

You can also eas­ily upload pho­tos from your mobile phone and share them via Twit­ter. Check out Twit­pic for starters. The first pic­tures of the US Air­ways plane crash into New York’s Hud­son river were uploaded to Twit­pic.

Any­one that’s also using Face­book might want to check out this.

If you’ve got any ques­tions about using Twit­ter, please feel free to leave them in the com­ments sec­tion and we’ll do our best to help out.

FestBuzz has landed!

Posted by Jennie on July 28, 2009

FestBuzz logo

Well, this is it — Fes­t­Buzz is finally here! After weeks of prepa­ra­tion, we’re offer­ing you the chance to find out what peo­ple really think at the Edin­burgh Festivals.

What is FestBuzz?

Fes­t­Buzz is a site cre­ated by Affect Labs and sup­ported by Chan­nel 4’s 4iP fund as well as Fes­ti­vals Edin­burgh.

Our mis­sion is to make it eas­ier for peo­ple at the Edin­burgh Fes­ti­vals to find out how good shows are. We’re doing this by aggre­gat­ing word of mouth from Twit­ter and run­ning it through our lan­guage pro­cess­ing engines to fig­ure out what your tweets are really say­ing about Fes­ti­val shows.

In short, we’re fig­ur­ing out a star rat­ing for all the tweets about a show and giv­ing this infor­ma­tion to you — so you can save time and money, find shows that might be over­looked, and gen­er­ally have an eas­ier time of it at the Fes­ti­vals this year.

Why are we different?

There’s no short­age of Fes­ti­val sites and list­ings providers out there, but we hope the bit above helps you under­stand why we’re a step fur­ther. We have over­worked robots out night and day search­ing for rel­e­vant men­tions of Fes­ti­val shows, match­ing them up with their sub­jects and then work­ing out how pos­i­tive and neg­a­tive they are. (By the way, that’s what Affect Labs is all about; we don’t just do Festivals!).

How can I use FestBuzz?

Glad you asked. As well as the main audi­ence site, which lets you dis­cover show rat­ings and con­ver­sa­tion, we’re also pro­vid­ing a dash­board to peo­ple who want more con­crete behind-the-scenes infor­ma­tion; for exam­ple, how pop­u­lar your spe­cific show is, if you’re a promoter.

We’re also open­ing up a data feed and embed­d­a­ble wid­get (we like to call it the BuzzBox) to select part­ners, and we have sev­eral lined up ready to go; if you’re inter­ested in either of these, or just want to play around with our data, con­tact Annette and we’ll see what we can do. (As well as email, you can get in touch on 0131 668 6906, or on Twit­ter — of course! — at @festbuzz.)

What’s in store dur­ing the Festivals?

As well as keep­ing our sys­tems hap­pily churn­ing out crowd­sourced reviews dur­ing the Fes­ti­vals, we’re going to have a ton of cool stuff going on here on the blog, and in Edin­burgh itself. Watch this space for news, reviews, pre­views, inter­views and any­thing else we can find that ends in ‘ws’. Plus, ticket give­aways, the Twitter’s Choice awards and of course the Edin­burgh Fringe Tweetup!