The Olympics are over. The medals have all been won. The ceremonies have all been held. The tweets have all been tweeted.
Fuente: blog.sysomos.com
The Olympics are over. The medals have all been won. The ceremonies have all been held. The tweets have all been tweeted.
Fuente: blog.sysomos.com
James Cheshire, a geography lecturer at the University College London, mapped common surnames in London.
Fuente: names.mappinglondon.co.uk
We saw more than 150 million Tweets about the Olympics over the past 16 days. Let’s take a look at some of the big trends within that massive conversation.
Usain Bolt London 2012 Olympics Final vs every 100m medalist!
The Summer Olympics kindle some serious national pride. But can the world’s biggest sporting event get tweeters in the United States feeling as pro-’Merica as the 4th of July does? Almost — but not quite — according to the social media analytics firm Topsy.
Fuente: Mashable
An underwater view of the London Olympics swimming pool.
In a lovely little 3D movie [nytimes.com] created by the New York Times, we see how every Olympic medalist in the Men’s 100-meter freestyle event would stack up to each other. France’s Alain Bernard would win (2008), with a wide distribution of Olympians behind him, including 2012’s winner, Nathan Adrian.
Fuente: infosthetics.com