Mr. Wales' Neighborhood
For the fourth year in a row, a company named Information Architects has released what it calls a "Web Trend Map" -- based loosely on the Tokyo subway map -- that is nothing if not prime link bait, and The Wikipedian is unashamed to chomp down. Here is a crop from the much larger original showing Wikipedia's "neighborhood":
For the record, the four websites situated closest to Wikipedia are HowStuffWorks, the non-Bill O'Reilly, Twitter and Huffington Post. To which I can only say: sure, okay.
Wikipedia is on the "Knowledge Line" which explains its proximity to O'Reilly and HowStuffWorks, where its connection to Twitter and Wikipedia is based on their relative popularity on each "Line." The size of the name and height of the station both correspond to Wikipedia's influence as a function of the creators' estimation. Wikipedia is in fact listed fifth overall, behind only Google, Yahoo, MSN and Apple. It's a little arbitrary, but these things always are.
As for the tiny figures saying the names of "Trendsetters," well, I wonder how either Jimmy Wales or Larry Sanger feel about the latter's inclusion at this late date. But that's a subject for another post.