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

Chris Cox wins FestBuzz’s Twitter of the Year award at Edinburgh Fringe 2009

Posted by elise on August 27, 2009

Chris Cox wins FestBuzz’s Twit­ter of the Year award at Edin­burgh Fringe 2009

Fes­t­Buzz have awarded Chris Cox, the com­edy men­tal­ist magi­cian, the first ever com­edy Twit­ter of the Year Award at Mervyn Stutter’s Pick of the Fringe.

Cox has been given this prize for his cre­ative and pro­lific use of Twit­ter which has helped gar­ner him almost 3,000 fol­low­ers on the site, and ensured his pop­u­lar­ity at this year’s Fringe fes­ti­val with his show Mind Over Pat­ter. He has tweeted around 300 times this August, con­vers­ing with fans and fel­low come­di­ans about com­edy, the inter­net and his show. Chris’ online name is @bigcox, and his mind-reading and magic show com­bines other new social media such as Face­book to cre­ate some excel­lent tricks for his audience.

Fes­t­Buzz is a new way to find cool stuff at the Edin­burgh Fes­ti­vals. It’s a project from Affect Labs, a data pro­cess­ing com­pany based in Edin­burgh, and is sup­ported by Chan­nel 4’s 4iP fund. Fes­t­Buzz aggre­gates “tweets” about shows and then uses sen­ti­ment detec­tion to cre­ate a star rat­ing for the act: reviews are crowd-sourced directly from the peo­ple who are see­ing the shows, rather than critics.

Twit­ter has become an inter­net sen­sa­tion in the last 8 months: func­tion­ing a lit­tle like Face­book sta­tus updates, you sim­ply tell the site what you’re doing (in 140 char­ac­ters or less) and then read what other peo­ple are doing from their “tweets”. The attrac­tion of Twit­ter is fol­low­ing other inter­est­ing or famous people’s tweets about their lives, cre­at­ing a stream of con­scious­ness type feed which illus­trates the chang­ing mood of the moment.

The prize will be pre­sented to Chris Cox at Mervyn Stutter’s Pick of the Fringe show start­ing at 1pm on Thurs­day 27th August. Stut­ter has been run­ning the revue since 1992 and will be pre­sent­ing his own Spirit of the Fringe awards on Sun­day 30th August.

http://www.festbuzz.com/

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.