Posts Tagged ‘twitter’

Interesting…

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Messing around with the Summarize service in OS X, I got the following result:

I like to think of it this way: Twitter is a bunch of friends sitting around a table, all shouting at the same time — and shouting mundanities at that.

(more…)

New Year, New Me…

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

…yeah, right.

New Year resolutions and I have a chequered history, so my plan for this year is to “just do it” (and probably get sued for trademark infringement while I’m at it!).

One of the things I struggle with is procrastinating, and social networks are a great way to waste time. On the other hand, there’s very few people I want to catch up with from school and I prefer the “old fashioned” tools of e-mail and RSS for keeping abreast of what my friends are up to, so without any further ado I have kissed goobye to:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn

Note that I have actually deleted the account, not just stopped using them.

identi.ca is on its way as well out as soon as I can figure out how to delete the account. You never know – dumping these might give me more time/inspiration for updating this site!

Happy New Year!

Chit chat

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Wow. Has it really been a month since I posted? Time flies and all that…

If you haven’t heard of identi.ca by now you must be living under a rock. Although my Twitter usage has been, well, zero for a while now I’ve made sure that my nick has been registered at identi.ca. Who knows – I might even get around to using it…

Of course the age-old problem is that I need to maintain accounts on Twitter and identi.ca (and all the others, but I’ve ditched most of those) whilst they remain walled gardens.

Much has been said already by others about identi.ca, so I won’t rehash any of that here. Of course they get brownie points for being Open Source and supporting OpenID. Once they add SMS and API support I think it will really start to take off.

Whilst browsing feeds today I came across the announcement for Nokia Chat. Initial reaction: oh great, another IM/Twitter clone. Their USP is the location information. If your phone has a GPS (like mine) it knows where you are, and with Nokia Chat you can let others know that. Nice, but there’s still something missing… So I read the FAQ and found this little nugget:

Can I connect with my friends on other IM services?
You can add friends who have Google Talk™ and other XMPP/Jabber based IM services to your friend list, see their statuses, and chat with them.

Now that’s a win. Chat with location services that’s not in a walled garden. I’m going to download the client and see what it is like.

Cleaning House

Friday, August 3rd, 2007

I’m trying to be more organised (and by extension more productive). As well as the obvious things like task management (I’m not yet back into full GTD mode, but I’m working toward it), I’m also trying to be tidier.

This is manifesting itself in two ways. Firstly my office is a dumping ground for anything and everything, and apart from the path from the door to my chair, and my immediate work area you cannot see the floor or any flat surface. I’ve got a huge amount to sort, but I’m taking those steps.

Secondly I’m looking to eliminate online ‘clutter’. The other day I dropped my Jaiku account as it was worthless to me. Pownce may be next. Inspired by advice from Web Worker Daily I made an effort to reduce my number of inboxes. If it doesn’t fit into e-mail, IM, RSS or Facebook I’m not paying attention to it anymore. Twitter fits into this as I can get updates through RSS, and thanks to their new functionality I’m only notified about certain peoples ‘tweets’ through IM. Twitter also fits nicely into Facebook.

Having increased my RSS load, this9123.entry prompted me to reduce. It made me realise that of my hundreds of unread feeds, and significant proportion were things like Slashdot, Lifehacker and a bunch of gaming sites from the people at Joystiq. More often than not, I’d end up marking them all as read without looking at them. Well no more! I’ve not scrapped every feed that has ‘staff’, but I’ve removed quite a few of them.

Which brings me to a final request. Dear lazyweb, who’s feed should I be watching that I’m not already?

Got to catch them all

Thursday, July 12th, 2007

I’ve updated my contact details with the (re-added) Twitter, as well as adding Ponce Pownce and Jaiku. If you’re using any of these and want to add me, feel free.

A Fresh Cup

Wednesday, July 11th, 2007

Last night, thanks to Twitter, I got to renew a acquaintance with Mike Gunderloy (I was a big fan of his books Coder To Developer and Developer To Designer). I used to follow his Daily Grind blog as it was widely regarded as the source for Microsoft Windows related development news, but as my interest in the topic waned I dropped it from my regular reading.

Fast forward to yesterday when Mike added me as a friend in Twitter, I discovered his new (to me) site A Fresh Cup which both charts his transition to Ruby on Rails (and an Apple platform) and serves as a Rails version of the Daily Grind.

Mike’s tale is very interesting to me, especially having made the transition myself (albeit to Python, but I went via Rails and intend to revisit it soon), and I think it might inspire some others too. For obvious reasons I’d like to have seen Mike move to Ubuntu (or any Linux distribution for that matter) but, as I was discussing with Josette (from O’Reilly) and Tony (whilst convincing him to get a Rails book) at the weekend, Rails and Macs still seem to go hand-in-hand so Mike’s choice was a natural one.

Oh, and Mike is using the same platform for his new site as I use here – Mephisto.

Chewing the fat

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

After dropping a couple of social networks, then being invited I’ve been doing a bit of thinking, mainly about the value in ‘broadcast’ mechanisms like Twitter and Ponce Pownce. This train of thought lead me into a chat with the-man-that-needs-no-microphone Nik Butler, who is a big fan of social networking (both on- and off-line).

As these sorts of chats are want to do, we did stray quite far from the topic of social networks, but as well as putting the world to rights he did make me appreciate some of the benefits that can be gained from putting the effort into using these sites. This, coupled with the realisation at several points through the day that there were things that I would like to broadcast, but didn’t warrant a full post here has led me to re-register with Twitter.

I’m hesitant to commit to too many networks though – having to maintain a status in Facebook, Jaiku, Twitter and Ponce Pownce is straining. Ideally I’d like to be able to edit one (or any) of them and have the others reflect that. I use Gaim Pidgin because I want my IM in one place1. I use a feed reader so that I don’t have to go to different places to get content. How long before there is combined client for social networks?

Although I have U-turned with Twitter I stand by my decision to drop MySpace, although my decision had nothing to with class. Quite simply it had almost no value for me in return for maintaining.


1 Although I had to fire up another application to be able to have the chat with Nik.

Poncing about

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

Yesterday I dropped two social networking sites from my collection. In a “everything happens for a reason” way I received an invite to Pownce this morning, which I accepted without really thinking about it.

A minor digression – I get that you can’t launch a new brand these days without savaging the English language, and I also get that they’re trying to do a play on the word pounce but no matter how hard I try I keep reading and pronouncing it as ‘ponce’ which is:

A British slang term for a dandy, fop or pimp

…which, for me, ruins the branding.

First impressions matter. In the few hours I’ve been registered Ponce Pownce has been down more than it has been up – or at least every time I’ve tried to access it. I managed to get registered and add the one person I knew who used it, but that is it.

…which for me, ruins the experience.

Seeing as I couldn’t actually use it, and I didn’t really understand (I did say I accepted the invite without thinking) what problem they were trying to solve – apart from taking on Twitter – I started doing some research. Tony Hung has summarised my findings quite succinctly, which reminded me of why I signed up for Twitter in the first place – being able to, er, twitter from my phone or IM.

This, to me, is far more valuable than the prettiest site design in the world. Until Ponce Pownce (or Jaiku) offer both these methods then they’re lagging behind. Sure it would be great if Twitter had sets, and being able to add events and files to Pownce is a nice feature (although events are better served by something like upcoming or meetup). Of these, sets is the only killer feature over Twitter and that’s ruined by being forced to use the website (or their ‘desktop’ client which I can’t use since Adobe’s interpretation of cross platform is as bad as Microsoft’s).

Trimming the fat

Monday, July 9th, 2007

After announcing which social networking sites I was using, I’ve now dropped two: MySpace and Twitter.

Both sites I joined on a whim – I only personally knew one or two people on each, and I’ve not invested much time in growing my networks on either. I thought about it and came to the conclusion that a) I wasn’t exploring the potential of either, but more importantly b) I had no interest in doing so.

MySpace

Although I enjoy music, I don’t feel the need to have the bands I listen to as ‘friends’. I feel it far more worthwhile to indicate my appreciation for a particular artist by actually, you know, listening to them so Last.fm is a far better fit for this.

In addition, with only one or two exceptions none of my real friends can be found on there so it’s use for actual networking is pretty limited.

Twitter

I liked the idea, but I can’t remember exactly why I signed up. Whatever goals they had in mind, I’ve only found it to be a poor mans Instant Messenger. I found a few twitters actually interesting (and in one case even profitable) but the vast majority fell into the categories of:

  • Interesting links – usually TinyURL’d due to the character limit which makes you less likely to click. If I find a link interesting, I’ll put it on del.icio.us, not spam my IM contacts with it!
  • Blog posts – again TinyURL-ified. Again there is much better solution for this – it’s called feeds
  • Half of a conversation one of your ‘friends’ is having with someone not on your list

I think the problem here is that Twitter is push-based, whilst I prefer to choose what I want to consume and more importantly how.

Certain features were cool, like being able to ‘twitter’ from my mobile (at no cost).

Delete, not discard

I could have simply stopped using both services, but I decided to take the step of actually deleting my accounts. If I find I miss them or I discover a compelling reason to use them then I may re-create them. Until then, I’ve got two less distractions to worry about.