'Long Tail' May Not Wag the Web Just Yet
Carl Bialik from WSJ writes "Expanding on an article he wrote in 2004 (and discussed on Slashdot), Wired magazine editor Chris Anderson argues in his best-seller 'The Long Tail' that the web is changing commerce from a hit-driven business to one focused on niches. But Wall Street Journal columnist Lee Gomes questions Anderson's data, and adds, 'I don't think things are changing as much as he does.' Gomes writes, 'At Apple's iTunes, one person who has seen the data -- which Apple doesn't disclose -- said sales "closely track Billboard. It's a hits business. The data tend to refute 'The Long Tail.' " ' On his blog, Anderson responds that Gomes 'stumbles over statistics and more, and in the end simply makes a muddle of what might have been an interesting debate over the magnitude of the Long Tail effect.'"
It's not necessarily fair to say someone else is "following the herd" because they don't like things the way you do. Your lifestyle is not innately superior, and your way of thinking has no objective edge over anyone else's.
The arrogance behind that kind of thinking is amazing.
Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.