Tuning regulars

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Revision as of 17:33, 26 May 2010 by Wikispaces>clumma (**Imported revision 144976829 - Original comment: **)
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This revision was by author clumma and made on 2010-05-26 17:33:14 UTC.
The original revision id was 144976829.
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Original Wikitext content:

The Tuning List Top Ten Posters
data collected 8/29/08

Paul Erlich - 8376
Carl Lumma - 5483
Joe Monzo - 4792
Joe Pehrson - 2912
Kraig Grady - 2456
Dave Keenan - 2264
Ozan Yarman - 2237
Johnny Reinhard - 1556
David Beardsley - 1461
Jon Szanto - 1379

These ten individuals have collectively posted 32,916 messages, or 42% of the total number of posts in the Yahoo tuning group.

There is much more to be said about this.

...There is? Ok, I'll say more: Over what period of time were posts counted? How did you get the data (Yahoo doesn't exactly provide APIs for this last I checked)?

It appears to be a power-law type distribution, which I would expect. Can anyone find the scaling exponent?

Original HTML content:

<html><head><title>tuning regulars</title></head><body>The Tuning List Top Ten Posters<br />
data collected 8/29/08<br />
<br />
Paul Erlich - 8376<br />
Carl Lumma - 5483<br />
Joe Monzo - 4792<br />
Joe Pehrson - 2912<br />
Kraig Grady - 2456<br />
Dave Keenan - 2264<br />
Ozan Yarman - 2237<br />
Johnny Reinhard - 1556<br />
David Beardsley - 1461<br />
Jon Szanto - 1379<br />
<br />
These ten individuals have collectively posted 32,916 messages, or 42% of the total number of posts in the Yahoo tuning group.<br />
<br />
There is much more to be said about this.<br />
<br />
...There is? Ok, I'll say more: Over what period of time were posts counted? How did you get the data (Yahoo doesn't exactly provide APIs for this last I checked)?<br />
<br />
It appears to be a power-law type distribution, which I would expect. Can anyone find the scaling exponent?</body></html>