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Power Laws, Weblogs, and Your Given Name

gummint writes "After contemplating the blogsphere and pondering whether "diversity plus freedom of choice creates inequality", consider an old-media domain name: the one your parents gave you. How did they choose it? How many other persons have the same one? Get some facts, or a lot of facts. Or just comment anyway. The good news is that the extent of inequality can change massively over time: the popularity of the most popular given names has decreased dramatically since the Industrial Revolution."

22 of 449 comments (clear)

  1. Data from the government by syr · · Score: 5, Informative
    The Social Security Administration has a database with information on the most popular baby names of about the past 100 years.

    Sort by decade or year of birth. Pretty interesting, imo. It's fun to watch which names stay on the top 10 for decades in a row and which were popular at one point and then declined dramatically.

    GameTab - Game Reviews Database

    1. Re:Data from the government by bko · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Very nifty db. If i had moderator points, i would be slightly tempted to mod you up rather than post. Slightly.

      Favorite stat from 10 seconds of perusal:

      Popularity of the name Trinity:

      Year of birth Rank
      2001 67
      2000 74
      1999 216
      1998 555
      1997 547
      1996 687
      1995 683
      1994 821
      1993 951

      Curious, isn't it. Something seems to have caused a sudden jump in popularity in the middle of 1999!

      While i really enjoyed the matrix, i can't say that it ever occured to me that it would cause a sudden spike in people naming their daughters trinity.

    2. Re:Data from the government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      I applaud you for your courage in showing how unintelligent you are. That takes a lot of nerve. Most people would have read the heading that said "rank" and figured it out themselves without embarassment.

    3. Re:Data from the government by pknoll · · Score: 3, Insightful
      How about this counterexample?

      Popularity of the name Chelsea:

      2001 156

      2000 140

      1999 123

      1998 94

      1997 73

      1996 57

      1995 48

      1994 46

      1993 25

      1992 15

      1991 19

      1990 24

      I guess parent-child reputation goes both ways.

  2. My name. by grub · · Score: 4, Funny


    When I was a lad still living on the Indian reserve I asked "Father, how did you name me?" he replied "Son, when a new child is born into our tribe, the father looks at the landscape and names the child after the first thing he sees.

    I nodded "Ok, go on."

    "For instance," my father continued, "your sister 'Soaring Eagle' was named after an eagle I saw high in the sky. Does this answer your question, Two Dogs Fucking?"

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:My name. by Em+Emalb · · Score: 3, Funny

      You forgot the ending.

      IIRC, it goes a little something like this:

      I shook my head in the affirmative.

      "Good", he said, "Now go play with your sister, Broken Rubber."

      --
      Sent from your iPad.
  3. Two names and two surnames... by mfarah · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Don't you hate when there's several people with the same name as yours? I know more than 10 different "Miguel Farah" besides myself, and that's only within my family.

    That's why most spanish-speaking countries keep using the two names + two surnames (the father's and the mother's) method for the full name of a person. That way, my full name is "Miguel Braxton Farah Fugate", which decreases dramatically the probabilty of a name collision (even more for people with relatively uncommon surnames, like myself).

    This practice was started somewhere in the Middle ages, and while it's not as good as a unique number or ID, the cases of people with two identical full names are very rare.

    --
    "Trust me - I know what I'm doing."
    - Sledge Hammer
  4. The Rise of Ryan by ryants · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I took a look at my name:
    • 1940s not even in the top 1000
    • 1950s #622
    • 1960s #242
    • 1970s #26
    • 1980s #14
    • 1990s #15
    and that's about where Ryan has been stuck now for 10 years, floating between #17 and #12.

    I was born in 1974. I wonder what happened in the 1950s - 1960s that caused such an upswing? I can't think of any popular celebrities named Ryan from that era. Any insights?

    --

    Ryan T. Sammartino
    "Ancora imparo"

  5. Re:Screw my given name by z_gringo · · Score: 4, Informative

    Many countries have laws to prevent this sort of thing. Im not sure about the U.S., but Germany requires that someone be named with an "appropriate" name, and in the case of dual nationality, they should have a name appropriate in both countries. A recent example was when a Turkish couple wanted to name their child Osama, but that was not allowed.

    Previously in Belgium, you had to use a name from an approved list, which means that if you were dual nationality Belgium/Spanish, Miguel would become Michell, or Santiago may become James.. (Im not positive what santiago would become, its just an example)....

    but anyway, in many places, I dont think you can actually change your name to: qwrtpsdfghjklñzxcvbnm....

    But then Cher has done well.. I should change mine to "Z", just like MIB...

    --
    -- -- Warning. Do not stare directly at the sun.
  6. Drugs & childbirth don't mix by gila_monster · · Score: 4, Funny

    My mother had this idea that she was going to name me Robert Keith, but call me Keith. My dad asked why they couldn't just name me Keith Robert. Mom said that it "didn't sound as good." Dad asked what difference it made how it sounds if nobody would use it that way. Dad's Lesson Learned: Do Not Argue With Pregnant Women. I think he slept in the garage.

    At my birth, Mom took one look at me and decided that I was the spitting image of her grandfather. She decided to name me after him, so she called me Robert Scott. Problem is, her grandpa's name was DAVID. For a long time, I thought it must have been the painkillers talking, but Grandpa David was born in Scotland, and so everyone called him Scotty.

    He *hated that. He thought it was akin to calling someone Polack, or Czech-boy, or Canook. He probably spins like a gyroscope every time someone uses my name.

    Scott

    --
    Ad luna, Alicia! Ad luna!
  7. Re:Screw my given name by foxtrot · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm going to have my name legally changed to something 27 letters long with no vowels, just to watch people try to pronounce it.

    Make it all vowels. With no vowels, people will just assume you're Polish.

    Besides, AaaaaaaaaiiiIiiiIIEeeeeeEEE is a great name.

    -JDF

  8. Well... by wiredog · · Score: 4, Funny

    My last name is Case, and my father wanted to name me Justin. My mother threatened him with unspecified dire consequences.

    1. Re:Well... by HybridTheory · · Score: 3, Funny

      Same story. Different Surname.

      Justin Cider.

  9. Re:How about Bart? by The+Bungi · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Nothing rhymes with Bart...

    Fart.

  10. Men and Women by wizarddc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I was having a little thought experiment going through these lists of names and such, and something dawned on me. It's fairly obvious from the data on these lists that men's names hang around a lot longer than women, and generally, it seems the top 10 was very stable in males (up until very recently, I had no idea Jacob was that popular...) while female names change top 10 at least once a generation. I was thnking why this happened, and when you think of female names, there are definitely "old" sounding names compared to males. No one thinks James or Robert sounds old, but Mildred and Ruth sound like older women's names. The one thing that came to me is that women "don't want to end up like their mother" while men look up to their father, even after he chops your hand off in a lightsaber battle. It seems like women's names gain a stigma of "old", and it's worse for a woman to be old than a man, so women name their daughter's newer, cuter names, where men respect their elders more (or something), so continue the line of Michael's and William's. Or I'm a sexist nutjob who should actually be working at work instead of reading /.

    --
    Th
  11. Re:Screw my given name by Xerithane · · Score: 3, Funny

    Come on Fhqwghads, everybody to the limit.

    The Cheat is to the limit.

    --
    Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  12. Re:Well as long as you're not Michael Bolton.... by catch23 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Actually I think the most applicable quote is this one:

    Michael: Yeah, well, at least your name isn't Michael Bolton.
    Samir: You know, there's nothing wrong with that name.
    Michael: There WAS nothing wrong with it. Until I was about 12 years old, and that no-talent ass clown became famous and started winning Grammys.
    Samir: Well, why don't you just go by Mike instead of Michael?.
    Michael: No way! Why should I change? He's the one who sucks!

  13. my parents were very un-original by BigBir3d · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Christopher Jason Smith

    When I had shoulder surgery in 1993, there was another Christopher J Smith there for the same basic operation, on the other shoulder. Of course the anesthesiologist switched the files! Basic idea was to put meds in one arm, operate on the other. He was rather offended when I yanked the I.V. out of my arm while asking "what are the first 3 numbers of the SSN on that chart?" Ten minutes later, after some ID checking and whatnot, I was on my way to dreamland.

  14. How exactly is $$$$$exyGal pronounced? by abh · · Score: 4, Funny

    What exactly is the pronounciation? Is it something like "ka-ching gal"? :)

  15. What's a Last Name? by linuxdoctor · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My own family didn't have last names until after the First World War and the loss land and power after that war. We were identified by our membership in particular Royal houses. We were addressed as Emperor, or King, or Duke, or Prince with the appropriate titles that went with it.

    With the First World War and beginning with the English Royal Family abandoning it's German roots by adopting the name of Windsor, they set the tone for the dismantling of the house system. My great-great-granduncle, German Kaiser Wilhelm II at the time of the English abandonment of their heritage, remarked that he always enjoyed the comic operetta "The Merry Wives of Saxe-Cobourg-Gotha," a reference to the British Royal family's true German name. Two of those house names are also part of my name.

    My own grandfather, an Archduke in the Austrian Empire had to abandon his titles and adopted a name that was taken from the name of the his ancestral home in the south of Austria. He was later appraoched by Hitler to help with the union of Austria and Germany, but categorically refused him. After the anschlus in 1938 his vocal anti-Nazi stance got him into more trouble and his lands were seized.

    This is all probably not very interesting, and I'll probably loose a few karma point by this post. But who cares? There is no such thing as Karma anyway.

  16. WTF?!?! by aengblom · · Score: 3, Funny

    Damn V-day! First, my bastion of geekness tells me I need a date. Now, one hour later, it tells me I have a kid and I have to name it.

    ACK!

    --


    So close and yet so far from the world's perfect ID number
  17. Re:Screw my given name by namespan · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Might work in some polynesian languages. You can go entire sentences in Samoan w/o using a single consonant (well... unless you count the glottal stop). O a'u ia (I am a fish). OK, that one may not come up often, but I seem to recall that the word for "learning" also has no consonants, so "I am learning" wouldn't have any.

    And I've met Samoans whose names were entire sentences. Fa'alelalolagi (like that which is below the heavens, I think).

    --
    Libertarianism is rich wolves and poor sheep playing gambler's ruin for dinner.