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Etymologies
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Examples
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"Aggregators" -- in my lexicon, blogs that collected lots of links in addition to presenting the blogger's own view (e.g.,
Econbrowser 2009
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- Aggregators, like Huffington Post, will still find ways to deliver your content for free and often with more engaging technologies since they don't have to invest much in content creation.
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Aggregators like Twitter or Facebook or FriendFeed or LinkedIn provide like-minded souls, neighbors, friends and colleagues with a centralized location where they can drop in and out at their leisure, exchange ideas, do business, and learn.
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Aggregators like Twitter or Facebook or FriendFeed or LinkedIn provide like-minded souls, neighbors, friends and colleagues with a centralized location where they can drop in and out at their leisure, exchange ideas, do business, and learn.
Women Grow Business » Women Have Always Been Great at Leveraging Community 2009
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Aggregators get tipped on quantity, meaning something will fall on your feed or appear popular because of concentrated engagement in a short period of time.
Azita Ardakani: Top 5 Things to Know About "Top 5 Lists" Azita Ardakani 2011
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- Aggregators, like Huffington Post, will still find ways to deliver your content for free and often with more engaging technologies since they don't have to invest much in content creation.
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- Aggregators, like Huffington Post, will still find ways to deliver your content for free and often with more engaging technologies since they don't have to invest much in content creation.
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Have to sign huge deals with the bigger Pushing Aggregators like the major labels
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- Aggregators, like Huffington Post, will still find ways to deliver your content for free and often with more engaging technologies since they don't have to invest much in content creation.
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It turns out that the long-tail theory, while true, has a nonintuitive corollary: Aggregators are the ones who benefit most from all that choice.
Monopoly Money In Silicon Valley Eric Savitz 2011
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