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The Best Way to Use Twitter

I seem to have joined a small, but rather active circle of people on Twitter, which for lack of a better description, is a kind of group chat over SMS, web, and IM. The basic idea is: you send in an update over SMS, web, or IM (AIM and Jabber-based services are supported). Friends who are “following” you receive this update over SMS, web, or IM. When your friends want to, they will send in their update. You can become friends of people without following them.

One thing that happens on Twitter frequently is that some people are friends with people you aren’t. They will send out an update in response to a friend you’re not a friend with. It may kick of another round of conversation, or an exploration of that friends “friends.” Suddenly, you might add them as a friend and start following them. Before you know it, you’ve got a lot of friends.

One of the more powerful things about Twitter is that you can send in updates over IM, SMS, and the web at any point in time. You can choose to receive updates over IM, SMS, web, and RSS–yes you can get your friend’s twitterings in an RSS feed. You are not tied to a single location or a single client, making moving between access and update methods simple. Of course, you’re not really “logged in” in the same way that an IM client logs into AIM, so you don’t exactly have “presence” information with Twitter like you do with AIM and the like.

I think with a little tweaking, Twitter could become a contender in the crowded IM space. They differentiate themselves by making their network more open on more platforms. They keep it relatively simple. It’s only text. It uses tools you already use. And it doesn’t try and do too much. A much smaller, nimbler application Twitter is.

Anyway, onto the meat of this article: how I use Twitter. I receive my updates via SMS on my mobile phone. However, given how many updates I’m starting receive on my phone, I was starting to get the “too much noise” feeling. Not to mention an astronomical increase in my SMS usage. I decided that “Direct Messages Only” was a better approach. The only thing: I miss out on instant updates. Fine, I don’t want to be distracted. But if I have a moment, I’d like to check in my peeps on Twitter and see what’s happening.

I tried loading the Twitter web page on my phone to check in, but it takes way too long to load. However, I recently remembered that my Nokia N Series phones (and my E Series phones) have a built-in RSS reader. I simply visited my “with friends” RSS feed URL on the Nokia phone and it automatically sucks it into the feed reader application. Any time I want, I can update that RSS feed and get the latest information.

With this, I now have the ability to talk to a large group of people anytime I want to over SMS. I can go about my day as normal during the times when I’m busy and check in when I’ve got a free moment, either from my phone or via the web. I only get interrupted with direct messages. I only push and pull information at my leisure. I’m not constantly having to quiet an incoming SMS.

Do you guys use Twitter? What do you think?

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One Trackback

  1. By The PhoneBoy Blog » Reducing My Identities on 27 December 2006 at 5:54 pm

    […] Skype is starting to have decreasing interest for me. It too is a walled garden, but there is a certain critical mass that is still there. It’s still a widely used VoIP program, so I will need to keep it around for the foreseeable future. I am on the fence as to whether or not I will spend the money for the $14.95 “unlimited US/Canada calls” deal they are selling. Depends on whether or not that includes “forwarded” calls. May get it anyway “just to have it” but I don’t see myself using it all that much Gizmo Project is a reasonable voice/IM client. It uses SIP for Voice and Jabber for IM. Not only do they deploy open standards, they also accept communication via anything that communicates to those standards. The IM client could use some work. If I could figure out how to get my Nokia N80i working with Gizmo Project (seems to be having some issues), I’d probably just use Adium for the Jabber portion and use my Nokia N80i for the voice portion. That’s the beautiful thing about using Open Standards. The reason to keep SightSpeed is because their video quality rocks. It provides a value that none of the other tools do. When they beef up their IM support, I might also keep it on more often. Right now, I just use it for pre-arranged video calls and the occasional video blog. Twitter is something that’s relatively new. The value it provides to me is that I can use it from anywhere–web, IM, or SMS. It’s not “presence.” It is a nice way to let people know what I’m doing and check in on and with my peeps. It’s asynchronous, and I believe there is some value in that asynchronicity. I can do Twitter whenever I want. And because of how I have it set up on my Nokia N80i, it’s not intrusive unless someone wants to message me directly. Even then, it takes two clicks on my phone to make it less so. […]

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