Daytum for Pretty Tracking

Gary Wolf

As a break from working through some of the heavy papers on mood metrics that I asked for and received, I started playing with Daytum, the place to make pretty, web-based charts from your data. Daytum is in an invite-only beta right now, but they are issuing invitations to all who ask as their capacity ramps up. The people behind the site are Ryan Case and Nicholas Feltron. Though the tools are simple right now the appeal is obvious.

Out of curiosity, I decided to take a look at the salutations used by people who email me. Most of my email arrives without a salutation. However, when there is a salutation, it is often either Dear Gary or Hi Gary. (If the email addressed to Mr. Wolf it is probably from a German magazine or a Nigerian businessman.) I've been curious about whether the Dear salutation is fading from email, as has been reported. My data say yes. In two of the samples, Hi Gary outnumbered Dear Gary by (very roughly) four to one. In the third sample, the ratio was much smaller; but this sample contained a lot of spam. In fact, a high ratio of Dear Gary in an email sample is probably a reliable signal that that the sample has not yet been filtered for spam. This point would be much clearer in the charts below if I did not include all the email that contained no salutation.

The charts below are static images, but they link through to the Daytum site, where they are much easier to see.
EmailSample1.png
EmailSample2.png


EmailSample3.png

 

1 Comments

#1 | Wed, 01-21-09 08:44 | Erik

Nicholas Feltron has also issued a cool annual report of all his data: The 2008 Feltron Annual Report

 

Leave a Comment

Your Name:









Thanks for your comment. The words in the CAPTCHA box come from old book texts that are being scanned and stored by the Internet Archive. By entering the words in the box, you prove you are not a bot and also you help proofread the books. If the sample you see is too hard to read, simply click the recycle button to get another two. Don't forget to put a space between the words.


 

Archives - This site operates under a Creative Commons License.