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Fun, Free Online Christmas Activities with Santa
For example, in my company Comtaste, we're using Twitter as a tool to keep updated with some of our client that we support in a remote basis. In this scenario I think Twitter is very useful respect to any IM platforms.
Due to its push mechanism (using for example Spaz or other AIR Twitter apps) you can easily communicate your activities to a small (or large) group of your team just writing a simple message.
The other side of the coin is that Twitter could be a tremendous tool for wasting your time when it's used by people as a massive content delivery platform.
Anyway I'm a geek and I can't live without my blog, my facebook account, my linkedin, and Twitter :)
This last thing could be a cons for some people, but isn't it the purpose of a social network ? What i appreciate also is the fact that you don't know if people are online and/or are reading your posts, which is less intrusive compared to other IM platforms.
While it was interesting when it first came out and was primarily a web-tool, the API has made it loads more useful. Programs like Twitteriffic have made Twitter a permanent part of the day for folks. I get breaking news faster (CNN feed) can connect with the industry faster (Wrox is a great example), can publish and get blog post "pokes" instantly and then get a peek into the days of the folks whom I follow.
I doubt the current incarnation of Twitter is what the creators imagined. I also see it converging (i.e. programs like Adium and Trillian adding an option for Twitter (or Jaiku) and having the potential for being used internally as well as on the internets (i.e. an "enterprise" Twitter where there are mandatory follows for execs, mgrs, teams, etc but then the ability to follow the streams of other employees with a gateway to the public twitter). I know I'd like to be able to "shout out" questions to an internal twitter to see if folks have quick answers (imagine getting a real response out of finance for a change!). Yes, there is rudimentary IM integration now, but it can be much, much better.
I've also suggested the ability for sites like flightstats.com to make Twitter notification an option (the excellent "feeds" from SimpleWeather on twitter are also an example).
For the next iteration of Twitter, imagine having the ability to follow "all folks who have 'OS X' in their profile" or "include public tweets with 'xyz' in them on my stream".
(Kinda all over the place here...apologies...on a con-call at the same time)
To answer your question, tho, my company (and my just former one) is not using it and will prbly not. Any company that wants to connect with folks really should consider it (and not for advertising...at least not solely). Until I sub'd to the CNN stream, I never used to go to CNN's site, but they provide a valuable and informative Twitter service.
At the moment, it has supplanted RSS feeds in terms of review priority. I now review Twitter first, then Google Reader then e-mail (or IM, depending on who the IM is from). Three years ago, it was E-mail, individual web sites, IM... amazing how thing can change so rapidly.
But, part of the fun is the learning curve, based on who you're following. Today was amazing.
Lisa
It not only functions as a hotbed for social media knowledge exchange, it’s also increased our impressions and extended our reach. Twitter is a great supplemental tool for rapid prototyping, testing and demonstrating social network marketing strategies for our clients.
We recently used Twitter in an integrated online/offline holiday piece sent initially only to our clients. Twitter helped make the campaign extensible, including other constituent groups and the Twitter crowd itself.
We've reestablished former business relationships and established new ones via Twitter, both online and offline. Twitter's sound bite parameters are far more powerful than one might think.
That's one really interesting thing that people tend to overlook when they criticize Twitter as "emo-driven micro-blogging". You're choosing specifically who you want to listen to -- and that may be news outlets, politicians, authors, applications or random people you find interesting.
I can assign quick tasks to my team by just twittering to @rtm (the "Remember the Milk" bot) with my Google Talk or cellphone, regardless of where I happen to be at the time.
It's a permissive layer sitting on top of IM/SMS, without the 1000 contacts, feeds or applications it would take otherwise.
Today I had an idea that was probably tried before, although I'm not in the heart of new media development so I can't be sure. Twitter's linear real-time refresh is great, but I do wish I could additionally extrude select portions of the commentary to another part of my screen. I can see how I'd want this feature even more if I were trying to isolate a topic of discussion or, say, a grouping of ideas. I'd like a way to list them out. Or am I now moving away from the original Twitter mission?
I do love this resource, though, and I'm going to incorporate it into my work and research where I can.