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  1. my comments during the #ianno14 @W3C Web #Annotation Workshop: tantek.com/2014/092/
    & stats: tantek.com/2014/093/t1/web-annotations-workshop-stats-ianno14

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  2. @W3C Web Annotations Workshop stats
    annotations about it during it
    * 138 #ianno14 tweets
    * 122 #annotation @kevinmarks tweets
    * 1 hackpad:
      * hackpad.com/Annotator-at-I-Annotate-2014-ksUGlRnOq3j
    * 1 Tumblr post (was cross-tweeted)
    * 0 blog posts

    Explicitly not double-counting:
    * 7 original notes POSSE copied from my site to among those 138 #ianno14 tweets:
      * http://tantek.com/2014/092/
    * 1 @kevinmarks summary post:
      * http://kevinmarks.com/w3cannotation.html

    Method used to count tweets: Twitter search, omitting results obviously from before/after workshop start/end by timestamp, omitting Tumblr cross-tweet.

    If I'm missing any other *web* annotations created by workshop attendees during the workshop itself, please reply and link to them so I can update these stats.

    There was lots of annotation use-case *talk* at the workshop, but was the actual annotation *walk* during the ~8 hour workshop?

    260 tweet annotations
      2 non-tweet annotations (hackpad, tumblr)

    Tweet "comments" were the 99% use-case of web annotations.

    This is what I previously* meant by High Frequency Annotations (HFAs).

    When we measure what workshop participants *did* as opposed to what they *said* they wanted, these comments (posted as tweets) about the event (using a hashtag as a proxy event GUID reference) were the most frequent type of web annotation made by attendees.

    Not counted, but would make for interesting additional data:
    Second-order annotations of those tweets, e.g.:
    * # of retweets: a full requote of a comment
    * # of favorites: like +1/starring a comment
    * # of replies: comments on comments
    of those 260 tweets.

    *Previously:
    tantek.com/2014/092/t5/ianno14-high-frequency-annotations-do-today

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