The 15-year-old kid in India, Yuvi, does a LOT more analysis of my blog. For instance, there’s a 70% chance I won’t link to something twice. I find this all fascinating. Gives me a look into my own behavior here that I never had. It also turns out I link a lot more to PodTech lately. That makes sense, cause I’m now part of PodTech and want you to know what I’m doing over there.
This analysis earned Yuvi a subscription. I find I’m putting stuff of his on my link blog. It’d be very interesting to see an analysis of what I put on the link blog. Why? Cause I bet that’s a bit less biased — I put anything on there that simply catches my eye. That might be a more useful thing to analyze.
UPDATE: Christian Long (my favorite education blogger) analyzes Yuvi’s posts.

Christian post is right on the money, we need more kids of this caliber.
Guy
Christian post is right on the money, we need more kids of this caliber.
Guy
Correction: We need more kids of his caliber in the United States
Correction: We need more kids of his caliber in the United States
Stefan, thats true, however, the world as a whole will benefit with kids that have this ability.
Guy
Stefan, thats true, however, the world as a whole will benefit with kids that have this ability.
Guy
[...] Last week has been the week of the year for me: Got scobleized twice! But more importantly, gained a lot of new friends. Thanks guys! [...]
He is a wonderful example of what can happen when a kid’s imagination and creativity is unleashed with a set of tools to accomplish a goal. This has been my long-held frustration with our schools here — instead of teaching kids to use technology to investigate and experiment, they’re taught rote tasks and told in backhanded ways that the Internet is an evil place where they should tread lightly.
There are only a few teachers who differ — unfortunately none of them are in our school district.
He is a wonderful example of what can happen when a kid’s imagination and creativity is unleashed with a set of tools to accomplish a goal. This has been my long-held frustration with our schools here — instead of teaching kids to use technology to investigate and experiment, they’re taught rote tasks and told in backhanded ways that the Internet is an evil place where they should tread lightly.
There are only a few teachers who differ — unfortunately none of them are in our school district.
[...] vindt Scoble zelf trouwens [...]
[...] going to write Part II of Analysing Scobleizer.com, with word usage analysis, but Scoble posted saying that an analysis of his Link blog would be more interesting. So I just copied the PaleRash [...]
[...] detailed analysis on blog traffic that I’ve ever seen. Recently he’s been analyzing Robert Scoble’s blog and producing really great statistics. Super interesting new things that even Robert Scoble is [...]