Dr Wu and Dr Huberman began by choosing a clear case of a novelty-based strategy, a website called digg.com. The idea of this self-styled “digital media democracy” is that any registered user can submit a story he has found on the internet. The new submission then appears on an “Upcoming” stories web page. Other users can vote for the story by clicking on a “digg it” icon. If the submission collects enough diggs fast enough, it is promoted to the first page in its category—say science or business. If it does really well, it also makes it on to the digg.com home-page, the equivalent of a newspaper's front page. However, when its popularity fades and the digg rate decreases, it is relegated to a more obscure part of the site and replaced by a new, upwardly mobile piece.
基于1个网页-相关网页
The new submission then appears on an "Upcoming" stories web page.
新提交的故事会出现在“即将来临”的故事页面。
The stories that are the most dugg appear on the Web site's front page.
得到最多赞成的故事出现在 Web 站点的头版。
The only thing on the disstill web page is a little slider bar that lets you filter Digg.com stories based on a minimum number of diggs.
disstill网页上唯一的只有一个小小的滑动条,用来过滤Digg.com故事的diggs到一个很小的数字。
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