No - I'm just going to take your word for it :) Thanks!
Edit: oh wait. In the top 10:
Email Clients, IM, AIR Apps, and Direct
Direct Traffic includes people clicking a bit.ly link from:
- Desktop email clients like Microsoft Outlook or Apple mail
- AIR applications like Tweetdeck or Twirhl
- Mobile apps like Twitterific or Blackberry Mail
- Chat apps like AIM
- SMS/MMS messages
It also includes people who typed a bit.ly link directly into their browser
seems to be 10x of twitter.com, so it's not easy to say that most of that is API traffic from Twitter clients, then.
So, then, no substantial evidence. I'm just curious whether it is a good assumption that twitter provides most of the traffic for all URL shortners, or not. Perhaps the people that run URL shortners can comment?
Edit: oh wait. In the top 10:
Email Clients, IM, AIR Apps, and Direct
Direct Traffic includes people clicking a bit.ly link from:
- Desktop email clients like Microsoft Outlook or Apple mail
- AIR applications like Tweetdeck or Twirhl
- Mobile apps like Twitterific or Blackberry Mail
- Chat apps like AIM
- SMS/MMS messages
It also includes people who typed a bit.ly link directly into their browser
seems to be 10x of twitter.com, so it's not easy to say that most of that is API traffic from Twitter clients, then.
So, then, no substantial evidence. I'm just curious whether it is a good assumption that twitter provides most of the traffic for all URL shortners, or not. Perhaps the people that run URL shortners can comment?