MonitterJonathan Bailey posted talked about a Twitter site today on Blogging Tips called Monitter.

Monitter works in a similar fashion to TwitterFall (another site Jonathan spoke about in his post) though it works a little differently. Whereas Twitterfall only lets you search one keyword at a time, Monitter lets you search for many. It works ust like Tweetdeck in that you can add new columns to search for new terms (and as you can see from the screenshot below, it looks just like Tweetdeck too!).

Monitter

It seems to work very well. Infact it works too well as if you search for a really popular term (like ‘Twitter’ or ‘Blogging’) it will refresh constantly, which makes it very difficult to keep track of things.

If you search Twitter a lot then I recommend checking Monitter out as it’s a lot quicker than the search function on Twitter itself. :)

Link : Monitter

read full article →

Do you have a Nintendo DS? If so, you might be happy to hear that someone has made a script so that you can use Twitter between games.

By the sounds of it the script is still quite buggy but it’s supposed to be pretty good. Worth checking out if you use the DS frequently :)

DS Twitter

Link : DSTwitter 1.5

read full article →

I read an article tonight from frickenate entitled ‘Twitter Would Sell Database to Highest Bidder‘. He noticed a few alarming statements within Twitter’s Privacy Policy. Including :

Twitter may sell, transfer or otherwise share some or all of its assets, including your personally identifiable information, in connection with a merger, acquisition, reorganization or sale of assets or in the event of bankruptcy. You will have the opportunity to opt out of any such transfer if the new entity’s planned processing of your information differs materially from that set forth in this Privacy Policy.

and

Twitter may sell… all of its assets, including your personally identifiable information, in connection with a… sale of assets or in the event of bankruptcy.

As frickenate rightly points out, this information not only includes names and email addresses, it also includes mobile phone numbers. Twitter has still not been bought over by a large company like Google or Microsoft.

If a business model cannot be found, would the Twitter founders simply sell the site, and users information, to the highest bidder? It certainly is food for thought :)

Link : Twitter Would Sell Database to Highest Bidder via @frickenate

read full article →

Without doubt, Twitter owes a huge amount of success to bloggers, webmasters and ‘tech friendly’ internet users who are quick to embrace new technologies (and to celebrities like Stephen Fry and Wil Wheaton). With Ashton Kutcher recently reaching 1 million followers and @Oprah approaching half a million quickly in less than a week, it’s fair to say that Twitter has arrived.

Twitter has been hitting the headlines a lot in the last 6 months but history has shown that once a service starts being embraced by superstars like Oprah, it is taken to a whole new level (We are talking about a lady with so much influence she can recommend a book and within a few weeks it will be on the top sellers list!).

I believe that Twitter is going to double it’s number of users in the next few months but I also believe a lot of the people who will be signing up are not very ‘internet literate’ i.e. people who use the internet frequently for email and web browsing but not much else. Will these people be using Twitter everday in 6 months time? Will they understand how to get the most out of it?

I am not suggesting that those who only use the internet for web browsing will not understand Twitter but perhaps they do not need to use it as much musicians, bloggers, gamers etc. So will they see it as a Fad?

Social Website Cycles

Social websites grow incredibly quick but they can also grow out of favour very quickly too. In the UK I witnessed Friends Reunited grow from nothing to a site which everyone from my high school class signed up to and it was referred to frequently when I was out at the pub at the weekend. Then, less than a year later, no ever used it. I guess everyone got bored of it i.e. the novelty wore off.

Whilst travelling America I saw MySpace grow in the same manner. Everyone I spoke to asked if I had a MySpace account and everyone seemed to be checking it daily. MySpace remains an incredibly popular site but it has certainly lost a lot of people to other social networking sites.

Around 2 years ago, Bebo was the site which everyone in the UK was using. All of a sudden people I only knew a little bit were telling me ‘they’d bebo me’ about something or other. However, in the last year that too has grown out of favour and no one seems to ever use it now.

The one everyone is currently using is FaceBook. For a few months I was checking it everyday because all of my friends (near and far) were leaving me messages and posting new pictures and tagging me. At the moment, I’ve not had to log in for a few weeks because very few of my friends seem to be using it anymore.

It’s not that FaceBook is any less useful. I just believe that is the nature of social networking sites. People catch up friends on it but after a whilte they become a little bored of it and the novelty wears off. I am sure that FaceBook will continue to get new members at a fast rate and I am sure that people will still use it a lot too, however I also believe that many of it’s current users will start to rely on it less and less.

So what has this got to do with Twitter? Well, I don’t believe Twitter can be compared directly to a social networking site because quite simply, it isn’t one, it’s a micro blogging service. However, social sites in general tend to grow quickly and decline just as quick. Will Twitter turn out to be a ‘fad’ in some peoples eyes?

Perhaps there’s a bigger chance of Twitter being replaced by a ‘Twitter Clone’ which is more reliable and has more features. There are many features that Twitter users want to see added to Twitter but so far they have not been added. If a company comes out with a good service with more functionality then it only takes a few key influential people to endorse it and it will grow rapidly.

What do you think : Do you think many people see Twitter as a fad?

read full article →

GeofollowI came across a cool Twitter directory today called Geofollow, a Twitter directory which lists users according to location instead of interests of categories.

All you have to do is send a tweet to @geofollow with “@geofollow your city, your State Your Zip #tag1 #tag2 #tag3″. Make sure you replace each tag with your location. Many users actually use the first 2 tags to tag their location and use the last one to tag themselves with an interest e.g. music, blogger, gaming or whatever.

Geofollow Twitter Directory

If you are looking to make connections with more people from your area I recommend checking it out.

Link : Geofollow

read full article →

If you have been using Twitter in the last few weeks then you will undoubtedly have come across several links to the story about Ashton Kutcher vs CNN. Along with his wife Demi Moore, Ashton was one of the first major celebrities to embrace Twitter from his account @aplusk.

When he reached 824,000 thousand people he noticed that he was 55 thousand followers behind CNN and duly posted this video :

Larry King responded in kind in true Hollywood fake-fight fashion with this video :

Ashton Kutcher asked his followers to agressively help him out on this campaign and it obviously worked because last night he reached the 1 million follower landmark.

Ashton Kutcher vs CNN

When he was approaching the 1 million mark he streamed himself, his wife and his friends through UStream. This 30 minute video shows you the before and after reaching the milestone. He reaches it just after 18 minutes into the video :)

Live Streaming by Ustream.TV

It’s worth noting that CNN have also reached the 1 million mark as well. With this story hitting the headlines this week and with Kuutcher going on Oprah today, I expect Twitter to see a huge amount of growth in the next 2 months.

The funny thing about this whole story is that CNN didn’t even own the Twitter account which reached the 1 million mark until last week. The official CNN Twitter account @CNN has under 70,000 followers but the one which reached the 1 million mark, @CNNBRK (short for CNN Breaking News feed), was launched by a CNN fan called James Cox.

According to Nieman Journalism Lab :

Cox, a web developer, wrote a five-line Ruby script that yanked CNN’s emails and turned them into brief messages on a Twitter account called, somewhat inelegantly, @CNNbrk. He signed up to receive those tweets via text message, and — voila! — Cox had breaking news on his cellphone. He alerted his friends on his personal Twitter account.

You can read the full interview and see a video of James talking about the whole thing at the link below :)

Link : How a CNN user propelled the network into Twitter’s top slot — or why CNN headlines are so short

read full article →
Twitter Survival GuideBlog Themes Club

About the Author

Kevin MuldoonJames Hakim is a webmaster, blogger and self confessed gadget geek! He owns numerous websites on the net including the popular Twitter Scripts.

Having signed up to Twitter in April 2008, he didn't really become active on it until early 2009. Since then he has been a Twitter fantatic!

To stay up to date with James please follow him @Twiter_Scripts on twitter or visit his company.
  • What I'm Doing...

    • Exciting thing's are going to be happening soon, watch this space! 2009-10-14
    • We have now completed our backlog of custom orders, we're now ready to work on new custom scripts so contact us!! 2009-10-12
    • Testing this out 2009-09-26
    • More updates...

Recent Readers