Tag Archive



Tweeters To Follow

If you’re just getting started with Twitter and are looking for users to follow, then Lifehacker has prepared a handy list to get you started. These are Twitter users who provide services, and there are a few more in the comments. Everyone from NASA to Amazon is on the list. Check it out - and of course, you can always follow me. :)



FriendFeed Tools

If you have succumbed to FriendFeed mania, then you may be looking for ways to use it better. If so, then Techcrunch has provided a handy list of 13 FriendFeed tools for Twitter Refugees. Some of these were familiar, such as AlertThingy and Twhirl, while others were completely new to me. Most have something to recommend them. The most interesting they mentioned was Gridjit and I’ll be checking that out for a later review.



Weekend Reads 13 June 2008

It’s almost the weekend, so I thought I’d share some of the interesting posts I’ve read this week. The first is a post from a Guardian UK blog on the Future of Journalism. It looks at how microblogging can be used in this way. Once again, the question of citizen journalism is under discussion, with Twitter as the main means of ‘demystifying journalism’. I don’t know that I agree with the article, but it raised some interesting points.

It occurred to me that Twitter is often included in discussion about the changing news process, and there have been many discussions online about how to use Twitter as a reporting tool. But while Twitter has huge potential for publishers, it is, at its core, a communication tool. It’s like round looking at a phone, trying to plan some editorial that uses the phone - when actually the thing to do is just to use it to talk to people.

Next up is Darren Rowse’s analysis of the differences between Plurk and Twitter. It’s all about how conversations happen, and he illustrates with some screenshots of responses to the same question on both services.

The other thing that I like about Plurk is that conversations are contained and don’t get as mixed up as they do on Twitter.

I have to agree that following conversations is easier on Plurk.

Finally, as the browser wars hot up again, Lifehacker has done a speed test comparing the latest release candidates for Firefox and Opera with Safari and IE7. IE7 takes no prizes, but the other browsers each win in one category. Happy reading.



Playing With Plurk

Anyone who knows me knows that I love to try out new things, so when I heard about Plurk, I couldn’t resist signing up to see what it was like. Many people suggest that it’s a Twitter clone, and it’s true that there are some similarities, like the 140 character limit for sending status updates. You can follow and be followed (having friends or fans in Plurk). But for me, that’s where the similarities end.

Plurk’s interface is very different. It’s a scrolling timeline moving from right to left, which seemed counter intuitive at first. However, it means that the latest content is always on the left where you read first. You can see all the updates you choose to follow (you can befriend people without getting their updates) in the top window. The bottom window shows your friends and fans and your karma (which is points you get from participating in the site.)

What I like about Plurk is that you can use lots of different verbs to describe your updates (thinks, feels, and so on) as well as a blank one so you can roll your own. You could end up talking about yourself in the third person, or you could behave Twitter style and just say what you want to say anyway. You can also set up an extended profile, MySpace style, but I haven’t done that yet.

A great feature is the ability to reply to a Plurk and see the responses in a drop down window, making it much easier to follow conversations than Twitter. The interface is definitely an improvement, but there’s one thing that’s lacking.

Goodness knows that the search features in Twitter aren’t anything to get excited about, but it’s virtually impossible to find your friends from other services in Plurk. You can add people from email accounts and IM but what I wanted to do was import my Twitter friends. No can do. Instead, I’ve been playing a hunt and click game to get a grand total of nine friends so far.

Plurk also makes it easy for you to group friends into cliques, though I haven’t tried this feature yet. Will I stick with it? I have no idea. I’ve got a lot of good friends on Twitter and unless they all move to Plurk it will probably remain secondary for me. That said, I think Twitter could learn a lot from Plurk, and it’s one to watch.

Here’s my Plurk profile if you want to add me.



Plurk Or Twitter?

Everybody’s talking about Plurk and wondering whether this is the Twitter killer.

Who knows? With Twitter more down than up recently, and having to resort to Tumblr to keep users updated on statuses, perhaps it’s time for a new service to take the throne. One thing that Plurk offers that Twitter doesn’t have is the ability to group your friends - something that would certainly make Twitter more useful.

Don’t think that Twitter will give up easily, though. Although everyone’s talking about Plurk, there are still a lot of things that Twitter has got right, like allowing multiple ways of sending status updates.



Twitter Tool: My Tweeple

One of the things that drives me crazy about Twitter, which I mostly love, is the impossibility of managing my followers and followees easily. The inbuilt interface is clunky and not very helpful and there’s no way you can match up who you are following with who follows you. (Call me a statsaholic, but I like to know that kind of thing.

That’s why I was happy to discover MyTweeple, which syncs with your Twitter account to provide an easy way to manage the people you are following and those who follow you. You can see at a glance:

  • who is following you
  • who you are following
  • if the following is mutual

And that’s not all. You get an at-a-glance view of their profile, so you can see their website, the number of updates they have made, the number of people they are following and who follow them and the ratio of followers to followees. (Not that important to me, but kind of interesting, all the same.) You can block, hide, follow and unfollow from that page and it updates your Twitter account.

Another cool feature is the ability to see people’s latest updates by clicking on the ‘view’ link. You can even indicate which people are being spammy by clicking a ‘ding’ link. I was pleased to see that most of the people who appeared in my stats had no dings, and I plan to look at the others very carefully.

I think that MyTweeple provides some much needed Twitter functionality, and I plan to use it at least until Twitter improves its own tools for managing followers.