After a week in sunshiny California, I am back & my bloglines is full. Thanks to Phillip Copley for taking over The Second Cup reigns while I was away enjoying some great Santa Ynez Valley pinot.
WhiteHouse.gov has gone Drupal. After months of planning, says an Obama Administration source, the White House has ditched the proprietary content management system that had been in place since the days of the Bush Administration in favor of the latest version of the open-source Drupal software, as the AP alluded to in its reporting several minutes ago.
Tweet Much? Don’t Expect a High CTR. New data I’ve been working on seems to indicate that the more frequently you Tweet links, the fewer clicks you’ll get.
I’ve been working towards a statistical model of how an individual makes a decision to ReTweet a specific Tweet and in that process, I came across an interesting problem: before someone ReTweets something, they have to notice it. If you’re anything like me, you’re only able to actually read a small percentage of the total activity in your friend’s timeline, which means that very few of the Tweets I’m technically “exposed” to ever even have the chance of being ReTweeted.
Tapping Into Your Organization's Data
I’m at the CIO Perspectives Forum here in DC today, and I participated in an interesting lunch discussion. This discussion focused on how organizations can better manage the content that they generate. There were several interesting issues brought up – of which a few I’ll mention below.
First, what constitutes information that an organization needs to archive and classify? While it is clear to save memos, proposals, spreadsheets, database, etc., what about instant message conversations or company-related tweets? If these are worth managing, how does a company capture such data and place this data into place with more traditional items?
FYI: I'm now Meghann Olshefski and my new email address is MeghannOlshefski at gmail dot com - Please feel free to send Second Cup tips & GOP tech story ideas to the new email address.

