Pfew! All done publishing the results of the 2007 Survey of the Biblioblosophere!
To refresh your memory, here are all of the posts about this year’s survey:
- 2007 Survey of the Biblioblogosphere: Demographics
- 2007 Survey of the Biblioblogosphere: Blog Demographics
- 2007 Survey of the Biblioblogosphere: Attitudes and Behaviors
- 2007 Survey of the Biblioblogosphere: Results from Various Filters
- Interesting Facts from the Survey of the Biblioblogosphere 2007
If you want to do your own analysis of the results, here is the file of all of the responses (via Google Docs and Spreadsheets — contact me if you want a regular excel copy). I hope others can find this data useful. 🙂
If you want to compare the 2007 results to the 2005 results, here is the index from 2005.
Thanks for making the data available for download. Would you mind deleting the IP address at at least one of the dates listed for each entry?
IP addresses, especially taken with dates and times, can positively identify an individual as a respondent.
Otherwise, next time, please be up front that you are going to publish individual identifying information along with the responses.
Great information – thanks!
Do’h! I had two versions (one without all that) and I managed to make the wrong one available. The spreadsheet is now available on Google Docs and Spreadsheets.
Biblioblogosphäre…
Meredith Farkas hat die Auswertung ihrer Umfrage zur Biblioblogosphäre jetzt abgeschlossen und stellt auf ihrer Website die Ergebnisse der Umfrage nach verschiedenen Kriterien dar. Recht überraschend finde ich auf den ersten Blick, dass offensichtli…
you’re great!
[…] We were introduced to the outspoken Annoyed Librarian, surveyed library OPACs worldwide and endured the mudflap girl controversy. We saw the first library Facebook Flyers, questioned the utility of library literature, and were given 2.0 librarians. Librarians were asked why they blogged and academics debated whether they should or shouldn’t at all. Meanwhile the entire biblioblogosphere was surveyed and analyzed. […]
[…] Farkas (Information Wants To Be Free) has an article summarizing her recent survey of the biblioblogosphere in the December 15 issue of Library Journal. In The Bloggers Among Us, she summarizes her findings […]