Monday, January 26, 2009

Keep track of a twitter threads fast

TweetDeck

TweetDeck enables users to split their main feed (All Tweets) into topic or group specific columns allowing a broader overview of tweets. The default columns can contain All Tweets from your timeline, @replies directed to you and direct messages. The GROUP, SEARCH and REPLIES buttons then allow the user to make up additional columns populated from the live tweet information. Once created these additional columns will automatically update allowing the user to keep track of a twitter threads far easier.

TweetDeck is an Adobe Air desktop application that is currently in public beta. It aims to evolve the existing functionality of Twitter by taking an abundance of information i.e twitter feeds, and breaking it down into more manageable bite sized pieces.

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How does it do that?
TweetDeck enables users to split their main feed (All Tweets) into topic or group specific columns allowing a broader overview of tweets. The default columns can contain All Tweets from your timeline, @replies directed to you and direct messages. The GROUP, SEARCH and REPLIES buttons then allow the user to make up additional columns populated from the live tweet information. Once created these additional columns will automatically update allowing the user to keep track of a twitter threads far easier.

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Additional Features
  • - Catch up with overnight global twitterings as TweetDeck stores all updates whilst running
  • - Continual status updates of TweetDeck and Twitter
  • - Resize TweetDeck as either an unobtrusive column, full screen or anything in between
  • - Especially useful running full screen on a separate monitor
  • - Filter tweets using the tweet text, username, source or timeframe
  • - Auto updates from the Twitter API
Download TweetDeck beta for Mac OS X and Windows (Vista & Windows XP)

This application requires the Adobe AIR runtime to be installed.

Download TweetDeck beta for Linux (manual installation)
TweetDeck requires the Adobe Air 1.5 runtime be installed first.
Then download the TweetDeck AIR file

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Twitter Hashtags and Tracking conversations

http://www.hashtags.org

A  great article introduces Twitter Hashtags.

To use Twitter Hashtags:

  1. Follow the @hashtags Twitter user (http://twitter.com/hashtags).
  2. Create a hashtag by adding a hash symbol (#) to the front of keyword
  3. Track the tagged conversations that interest you. Twitter updates that include a valid hashtag are indexed at Hashtags.org

Hashtags was designed to accommodate the real-time news community. They provide analytic reports and indexing features to allow users to track what's happening now.

Hashtags are a community-driven convention for adding additional context and metadata to your tweets. They're like tags on Flickr, only added inline to your post. You create a hashtag simply by prefixing a word with a hash symbol: #hashtag.

An Introduction to Twitter Hashtags

Tagging helps to organize and share our online information with others. By attaching one or more keywords to a Flickr photograph, for example, we group it together with others that have the same tag. Hashtags serve a similar purpose on Twitter, the social micro-blogging service. The aim is to bring some order to Twitter users' published updates ("tweets") and make it easier to follow a topic of interest. And you don't necessarily have to be a Twitter user to get a benefit from hashtags.

How to Use Hashtags

1. Follow the @hashtags Twitter user (http://twitter.com/hashtags). It will follow you back automatically, and this enables the service to recognize and index your hashtags.

2. Create a hashtag by adding a hash symbol (#) to the front of an appropriate keyword as you write your Twitter update (for example, #nptech).

3. Track the tagged conversations that interest you. Twitter updates that include a valid hashtag are indexed at Hashtags.org, organized by tag, and available as individual RSS feeds. This means that you don't have to be a Twitter user to follow the conversation — it's visible to anyone.

Note that each hashtag index has its own web address and feed, distinguished by a word at the end of those URLs that matches the hashtag keyword.
The nptech tag is often used on other platforms to tag content related to nonprofit technology topics, and this has started to show up as a hashtag on Twitter as well.

Whenever #nptech is used as a hashtag in a Twitter update, that update will be automatically added to http://hashtags.org/tag/nptech/ -- and the corresponding RSS feed at http://hashtags.org/feeds/tag/nptech/.
You can choose to subscribe to the RSS feed for your favourite tagged Twitter updates,  such as those that have been tagged with #nptech.
That will send any new #nptech-tagged updates from Twitter to your favourite news reader (e.g. Google Reader, Bloglines, etc.).
As well as subscribing to an RSS feed for any tagged Twitter topic, you can re-publish the feed on your own website, archive it for future reference, combine it with other feeds to make a custom feed — and countless other possible uses.

Less is More
Hashtags are community-driven, so their ability to deliver what you're seeking will be determined by how effectively the community chooses to use a tag.  For example,
#sandiegofire set the standard for the use of hashtags by a Twitter group to track news of a major catastrophe and to mobilize real-world resources to help those affected.
That said, not all Twitter users are welcoming hashtags with open arms:
"
What's #irritating about #this sentence?
Dave Coustan's position is that Twitter should be about human conversation, not about writing for databases. "Imagine what Flickr would look like if all of the metadata was visually stuck to your photograph," he says. "Or what your blog would look like if you had to have a character before every word in your text that was also a keyword. Ick."
Certainly, as with any social-tagging system, hashtags have a potential for overuse and abuse that could dilute the effectiveness of any particular tag. Because the hashtags user must "follow" another user in order for that user's hashtags to work, however, a spammer or michief-maker could be "unfollowed" and thus dropped from the index.

Hashtag etiquette is still evolving, so let good social manners be your guide. It is a rare "tweet" that deserves a hashtag, so tag only those updates that you feel will add significant value to the conversation. One hashtag is best — two are permissable — but three hashtags seem to be the absolute maximum, and risk raising the ire of the community. Tag sparingly, and with careful discretion.

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Some cool Twitter tools

Image representing Twitter as depicted in Crun...

Image via CrunchBase

In the  The Twitter Manual -David Risley has a section titled Getting the Most Out of Twitter .

I wonder what are the most popular Twitter tools and utilities.

 

Getting the Most Out of Twitter
So, Twitter is what it is. However, there are a lot of really cool third-party sites out there that take advantage of
Twitter to provide add-on capabilities.


Summize (

www.summize.com )
Summize is a search engine for Twitter. They cal themselves the "conversational search". It is cool because it
allows you to search realtime conversation taking place on Twitter. For example, the big news this week is
Apple's launch of the new Iphone. Twitter is atwitter on this topic, as a quick search for Iphone shows you.

TweetBeep (www.tweetbeep.com)  
Get email alerts whenever somebody tweets about something you're interested in. It is actually allot like Google
Alerts, except for Twitter. Want to be notified if anybody mentions your name, your city or your website on
Twitter? Set up a TweetBeep.


A look at TwitterPoster might remind you of the old days of those million pixel homepages. What it is is a
graphical representation of the most influential Twitter-ers. The larger the image, the more influential the person
right now. Might be a bit useless, but it is cool.

TwitterFeed (www.twitterfeed.com)

If you run a blog or anything else which has an RSS feed, you can use TwitterFeed to automatically fetch the
latest entries from that feed and send them as tweets using your Twitter account. A lot of bloggers, for example,
use this to automatically send out links to new posts over Twitter.

The Twitter Manual - (cc) David Risley - http://www.davidrisley.com

 

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