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The short story is I learn from Twitter. I read tweets from smart folks, follow links (like how I arrived here) and I expand my brain. Everyday there is new learning or exchange worth tuning in for.
Facebook for me, heretofore, is a social gathering. Yes, I enjoy connecting with family and friends - I have reestablished long forgotten connections - but I'm not a welcome receiver of 'shots', 'flair' etc.
I find myself wishing that my friends on FB would update there status on Twitter instead.
Plus what a great time waster.
Thanks for a really interesting piece.
Btw, I'm following you now!
I belong to quite a few, but twitter makes it easiest for me, so that is the one I use most. I would like to put my blog into 140 characters! ;) Stumbleupon is my other favorite social media site, again because of its value for time put into it.
I check twitter before email or anything else and find value & connection no matter what continent I am on or what time of day. I can stay connected even if I happen to only have a few moments of free wifi while roaming the world.
Sadly, I would have missed it entirely had we not decided to take this world tour. It has amazed me that we have learned as much about the web2.0 world as we have the real world in the last 3 years of our unique family journey.
It will be interesting to see how it unfolds as more people find it.
Coincidentally (or not) a friend who recently moved to Asia from Europe asked me why I twitter. I responded with the following (via gmail)
Twitter is an easy to use, short form way to update whatever, whomever whenever you have something to say. In addition, I like the graphics - I'm picky that way, it's a lot prettier than FB and I haven't delved deeply into friendfeed.
I use it for news from follow new media people, journalists and newspapers I trust whose interests or focus is parrallel with mine. That said, I've yet to use anything I've learned from twitter as a source. I'd verify it if I did.
Conversely, my tweets focus on a handful of categories with short links to stories that strike me. They include social networking, business, human rights, empowerment of girls and women, people who make a difference and sometimes parenting of teens and culture.
The gist though is that I'm interested in what people "like me" are reading and I think my "followers" trust my judgment and share my interests. It's "curated content." http://twitter.com/susaw
Very rarely will I share my "thoughts." The links tell followers what I care about.
I don't follow people who tell me that they are at starbucks or wearing their pajamas for the day. There is one funny guy I follow who does share the mundane but he usually adds a tidbit about a book he's reading or something else that's a newsworthy bonus.
I have a second Twitter account that I share with my writing partner. It's for NYcentric things, http://twitter.com/uptowndowntown. Haven't put this one to good use of late...
I told my friend that , once/If she gets into it, I suspect she will see that not only is it fun, but one can garner a lot of information from other twitterers... I confess, it's fun to take an occasional look at who's begun to follow me. I look at people I follow to see who they follow and sometimes add to my list - just more to read online and yes, addictive but it's not like playing solitaire.
Interesting to read why people twitter. thanks for the op.
For me, the most important thing about twitter is its transparency. Which is the key to the next, better society anyway.
I blogged about it here:
http://thedaddynetwork.ning.com/profiles/blogs/...
I think it could be a huge balancing of information availablity, which is strongly weighted in favor of our kids, even though as parents many of us use technology at work, but not so much at home.
There's a lot more value to the info coming out of Twitter than many appreciate. As a simple example, some of my kids work for a certain fast-food restaurant. Yesterday I just did a quick Twitter search on their name, and found there's roughly 2000 tweets per week.
Even if half of these are just someone saying they're eating there, the other 1000 unsolicited comments would cost quite a lot to collect, but they're on Twitter just free for the asking, anytime someone wants to look.
We've barely scratched the surface of Twitter's potential, but it's already the best way to get on the leading edge of most any field of activity. The main question I have now is how it will be integrated with other sites, particularly FriendFeed and Facebook?
People need to understand how these tools differentiate themselves from one another:
-IM = One-to-one immediate conversations
-Twitter = Open group discussions and sharing.
-Blogging = Presentation, followed by group commenting or discussion (depending if the commenting tools used)
At the moment, it's still way too early to say if Twitter can trump Facebook, but the potential is there in the form of the extensability of the platform itself.
Herein is a lesson for Facebook. As mentioned above re moving "off closed email systems to open ones," look what happened to AOL. If I remember the sequence of events correctly, while their platform was indeed exploding, their growth didn't go Thermonuclear until after they open up to outside email.
Other examples include Firefox's add-on ecosystem and Google's AdSense which put a little piece of Google almost everywhere across the entire web. Seems to me that Face needs to learn that lesson or it will suffer a similar fate as AOL.
Shameless Plug: Read more at http://www.nealwiser.com
"In the end, we’ll flock to the solutions that best increase our ability to be in touch with more people ... "
I've been using Flock as a separate browser to stream updates from friends on Facebook and Twitter. I follow their messages in the sidebar, and continue conversations as needed.
This is not the most elegant solution, and I'll be happy when I find a better way to continue the exchanges I'm interested in, whether on Facebook, Twitter, or elsewhere.