Wait, did they just say 30% of Twitter? They did. According to earlier calculations from the Mashable guys, about 22% of "Tweets" contained the term "michael jackson" by late June 25, the day he was declared dead. If you factor in the number of Tweets including the phrase "MJ," "michael," or "king of pop," the number breaks the 30% mark.- 200,000+ status updates through the Facebook integration on CNN.com
- 3,000 people commented on the Facebook CNN feed per minute
- CNN served 13.9 million live video streams globally in about 6 hours
- Don't forget about the millions of other live streams and TV viewers that watched worldwide.Now, throw all those numbers out the window, because Michael Jackson's memorial is almost certain to utterly overshadow Obama. Not even Obama consumed 30% of Twitter and set traffic records at Yahoo.
In other words, Jackson's death has already become one of the most compelling, fanatic online furors ever, and the plethora of live-stream options really could shatter the 2009 inaugural records.But enough with the oohing and ahhing over numbers: Will Michael Jackson break the Internet? That is, will the world's biggest live-stream providers be able to handle the massive audience or are we going to witness massive server crashing? I don't know, and neither does anybody else. We'll all have to wait (and watch) and see.










Well so far so good. The internet seems just fine. I'm watching the live stream at the same time as I'm commenting and I don't see any slowing of service or glitches anywhere. I love technology, to bad it couldn't save Michael Jackson.
Brewer Caldwell