All A-Twitter

It’s been fun to watch people I know take to Twitter. [Especially Alex.] Ross Mayfield writes about the rapid adoption—using the term “tip the tuna”, which I’m wholly unfamiliar with and brings up a point I wholly agree with:

Good thing too, because back when it was called twittr people held back believing what they posted would be interrupting on mostly mobile devices. Lately I think people just go for it, and most consumption is on the web or other clients. I’d love to see some research on posts/user, client use, tracking @username, group identities, geographic dispersion and revealing other undesigned conventions.

That was exactly my original hangup in signing up for it. Like Alex, I find that Twitteriffic is practically perfect for the service, and I lament the lack of a Windows-based counterpart client. [But then I hardly have the time to update at work these days.]

The best thing about Twitter is the constraints: a simple system with a simple vocabulary of verbs, limited by 140 characters. It’s well nigh awesome. Constraints are good—they encourage creativity. Blank slates? Too intimidating.

Posted March 10th, 2007 in Geekery by Geof F. Morris.

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  1. Alex:

    Is Twitteroo a contender on windows?

  2. Geof F. Morris:

    Yeah, I think that it could be. I know that my boy Chris is using it, and I’ll probably give it a shot tomorrow.

  3. Around the web | alexking.org:

    [...] All A-Twitter [...]

  4. Chris Hubbs:

    Yeah, I’m trying out Twitteroo today here at work. I got it installed at home yesterday but didn’t really try it much.

    So far at work Twitteroo is a bit shaky; it appears to be pulling down updates OK, but it only has about a 50% success rate so far in sending in my tweets. Not sure if that has to do with the proxy here at work or if it’s a general issue with the application. I’ll keep trying.

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