Posts Tagged ‘twitter’
Twitter is down…
But if it wasn’t, I would have come up with this:
Real men don’t send mails to everybody, they flame somebody and let the world distribute their message. (from Lorenzo)
A Twitter book?
I have this idea: writing a book with twitter.
Twitter is a conversational tool, so it could be also writing the book WITH twitter followers, rather than just writing alone.
What do you think about it? A good idea? A bad one?
Probably I’d need some kind of coding, to show the result in a nice webpage or something.
Still thinking… I’ll let you know.
Fact is that I’m trying to declutter my agenda, and not to take new commitments. I’m prevented from starting something new… unless it’s really cool. This Twitter book seems so!
Using twitter to create an audience
Very interesting article about how to use twitter to create an audience.
Update: Problogger adds five tips to grow your twitter presence. Must read.
State of the blog!
Today, may 3rd 2008, my blog has 20 feed readers, 3 technorati reactions…

…and my twitter account is followed by 60 people (and I’m following 102).

I’d like to make this blog more popular, and my goal for the end of the month is:
20 100 feed readers;
3 10 technorati reactions;
60 100 followers on twitter.
Let’s see if I’m able to do that.
If you love me, spread the word about this blog, tell your friends, and if you use a feed reader, subscribe to my feed!
Also, I’d appreciate your comments on this blog, what you like, what you don’t!
Thanks a lot!
Twistori
Twistori is an “ongoing social experiment“.
I’m not completely convinced, but… it’s interesting, at least, and the website is simple and clean.
It uses Summize.com to collect “twits” (or twitts, with double T?) in real time. Thank to Twistori, I re-discovered Summize, which is a great tool to analyze Twitter trends.
The world simulation, with Twitter
Watch this video: it’s the world simulation game, twitter-aided. Interesting event, interesting conclusions.
Of course, discovered via Twitter.
The group that created this is:
“a working group of Kansas State University students and faculty dedicated to exploring and extending the possibilities of digital ethnography”.
Cool, guys. Make the world a better place :-)
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