Tag Archive for 'Twitter'

Twitter Retweets

Twitter. Retweets. If you know what I’m talking about, read on. If you don’t, go to the next post. Simple as that. And yes, this is a rant, because it really irritates me that some people refuse to use it simply because they can’t comment on Tweets, yet that very person keeps retweeting verbatim tweets from someone without making any comments. So uh, why not use the new method, duh? Anyway, to business.

Why you should NOT use Twitter’s new RT method:

It doesn’t allow for commenting on Tweets. Okay, yes, fair point, but about 1 out of every 20 retweets that I ever do have a comment from me, so really, it doesn’t bother me. And most of the time, it doesn’t need a comment. If you retweeted someone, well, you either liked their tweet, or found it funny, or useful, or nice. There’s no need to say that. Really. I get it. ;)

Twitter could “fix” this by adding some kind of “comment” tweet attatched to it, but honestly, I don’t see the need. As it is, I rarely want to comment on retweets, so…whatever.

Why you SHOULD use Twitter’s new RT method:

Duplicates. I follow over 200 people, many of whom know each other – for example, I follow the iTweetReply (iPhone app) team. This consists of three developers, plus the iTweetReply Twitter account and the Syncode Twitter account. When one of these Tweets, do I really need to see the same thing, but retweeted five times? Five times? Five times? Five times? Five times? Yeah, exactly. Sure it might be getting you more exposure, but in the end it’s just pissing me off (and doubtless other people as well).

Annoying people who RT too much. Thankfully, none of my followers retweet stuff so much that I want to disable them, but it’s there if I ever do. I’m close to switching off retweets for one person, but, alas, they’re still using the old method. Yet their personal tweets are interesting, so I don’t want to unfollow them.

You and your company, product, or business. I follow you. You tweet about your personal life. I like this. You also retweet almost everything about your product or company says. Which I don’t care about because I don’t use it or I use a different product. This doesn’t really come under retweets, but it’s almost as bad. I don’t really need to know when your product has a new feature or website or information about it or stats…if I wanted to know this, I would follow your product’s Twitter account. Not you. And then when you did retweet it, using the new method, I could see that tweet, once, and that’s it. Okay?

It’s easier to keep track of. On Twitter’s website, it shows information about your retweets. Including stuff like how many people retweeted something, which of your tweets have been retweeted, and so on. It’s like a super mini version of Google Analytics, but for retweets! :D

It’s less annoying. I love Twitter’s “mentions” feature. It lets me see who has mentioned me in a tweet, or sent me a reply. What I don’t like is when 50 people* retweet something of mine, and then I get 50 mentions of something that I said. Really, I don’t need to see all that. Even more so when every @reply to me is sent via push notifications to my iPhone – it becomes annoying.

It’s a Twitter feature. It’s there to be used, so use it! Remember when @replies were changed to mentions? Everyone cried and said it was a horrible thing and the world would end. 2 months later, no one said anything, because guess what, it works. Once Twitter refine the new retweet method (by adding commenting like I explained above – which other people want), and most, if not all Twitter clients implement it, I would hope that everyone switches over to using it, because it’s great.

*as if I’m that popular. The most I’ve ever had has been about 20 people, and that was only once. Still, god knows what it would be like if I was famous. I’d stab my eyes out.

Tweetie 2

Tweetie

Released in November 2008, I bought it and was hooked. The clean UI, overall simplicity, and ease of use were great. Sadly, it lacked useful features like multiple attachments (eg, photos to TwitPic), and support for other services, like TwitVid. But it was still usable. The problem is that the developer pretty much dropped off the face of the earth for a few months.

Until last month, when Tweetie 2 was announced, which came out, literally, in the last hour or so.

Tweetie 2

Sweet new icon eh? Anyway, Tweetie 2. It’s awesome. It has support for 2394586345749356436 different services, including TwitVid (yay!), and, in one word, it rocks. It’s well worth the £1.79, and the whole app feels super smooth, the UI is still clean and still works well, and it’s amazingly good overall. If you have an iPhone and use Twitter, then get Tweetie 2. There’s a reason why it’s the winner of Apple’s 2009 Apple Design Award. :)

And of course, you can get Tweetie 2 on the App Store.

Your Location on Twitter

http://blog.twitter.com/2009/08/location-location-location.html

Brilliant idea, in my opinion. This should turn Twitter into an even better service. The only problem is, I can see services such as Brightkite being made extinct after this. Still, they might be able to work out a way to make it even better. Who knows. Anyway, I think this is a very useful and worthwhile feature to Twitter and I look forward to trying it out. Once it’s live, I’m pretty sure I’ll be dropping Brightkite for good. Sorry guys.

Win a copy of Snow Leopard!

Twitter Snow Leopard Giveaway

Squarespace did it, Moonfruit did it, and now I’m doing it. For fun. And also as a bit of an experiment. I wouldn’t consider myself huge on Twitter (despite me owning this), so I’d like to see what kind of impact a giveaway from a person with just 325 followers would have on Twitter in general. It probably won’t be much of an impact like Squarespace or Moonfruit’s ones were, but I can try anyway. ;) Oh, and lastly, because this is being funded out of my own pocket and because I’m not a rich corporation with lots of spare cash, I’m only giving away one copy, and I’m only giving away one copy of the upgrade version, not the full version. But of course, if you’re willing to offer a sponsorship deal, feel free to ask. :D

So, onto the details/rules:

  • You need an Intel Mac that 1) is running Leopard now, and 2) can run Snow Leopard (duh :roll: ).
  • To enter, simply add the hashtag #osxgiveaway to any tweet you make. There’s no limit, so feel free to enter as much as you like!
  • You can enter anywhere from now until 12pm (midday) GMT+0, on the day of Snow Leopard’s UK release – 28th August 2009.
  • You do not need to follow me on Twitter to be eligible to enter.
  • Entry is open to residents of these countries only: Apple – Choose your country or region.
  • Depending on whether or not I’m able to purchase Snow Leopard from your country’s store, I may have to purchase a copy from the UK Apple Store and ship the box via the postal service to you, so please bare this in mind. ;)
  • Because Snow Leopard is stupidly overpriced in the UK (and if you win, and you’re in the UK), I’ll contribute £20 toward it, and you can contribute £5. Fair deal I’d say. ;)
  • Once Snow Leopard is released, I will place the order and get it shipped to you within two weeks of Snow Leopard’s public release. I will, of course, keep you updated via email, @ replies, or Direct Messages on Twitter.
  • If you win and you already have a copy of Snow Leopard, and you don’t need another (c’mon, be nice!), let me know and I’ll pick another winner.

To link to this post, here’s a nice short tweet-sized URL: http://bit.ly/osxgiveaway
If you want to follow me on Twitter, I’m @williamtm

And that’s about it. Good luck, tell your friends, and get tweeting! :D

Update: The competition is now closed, and the winner is @djchrisallen! Congrats. :)

Antisocial Behaviour

Social networks. First, it was MySpace, now there’s a social network for pretty much everything. Facebook, Twitter, Plurk, WordPress, Brightkite, and god knows how many more. :o

Then came “Ping.fm”. One site that allows you to update your status message on ALL these sites no matter where you are, and from a single website. Pretty neat. So, last night’s release of the Twitter client “Twhirl” interested me, because v0.9 has built in Ping.fm support. Meaning, I could use Twhirl to post to Twitter, and then get those updates pushed to Facebook, Plurk, and Brightkite – which are the three sites I use the most.

However, after thinking about it…no. If I do it that way, it works when I’m on a PC, but if I tweet from my iPhone while I’m out and about, I generally use Twitterrifc for that, and that doesn’t post to Ping.fm. Since I would have now had to disable Facebook from grabbing my status updates from Twitter, that means if I tweeted from my iPhone, Facebook wouldn’t get updated.

I’ve gone back to Twitterrific since then, but herein lies the problem. If I was to switch to using Ping.fm full time, I want an application for updating it on both my PC and iPhone. There’s Twhirl for PC/Mac, and “Pringle” for the iPhone, but I find them both….ugly. Twhirl not so much, but both apps, compared to Twitterrific on both platforms, are ugly. Plus there are other annoyances…if I update my location in Brightkite the way I had it setup originally/now, that update is pushed to Twitter, and then from Twitter to Facebook. Using the other method, it would only be pushed to Twitter. And not Facebook. :(

So, until someone can design an app that can 1) have both desktop and iPhone clients that look pretty and work well, 2) update everything at once, no matter what, and 3) has no annoying quirks that I dislike…well…I’m sticking to Twitterrific.

I think, overall, Ping.fm works well, but it doesn’t work well enough for my liking yet. Oh, and if you want to follow me, do so on Twitter. I’m most active on there then anywhere else. Followed closely by Facebook. ;)