In Social Media, Software
02 Aug, 2008
The number of Twitter services and applications continues to increase as more individual developers, software houses and businesses come online. Here’s a few interesting ones:
Services
- Twitterfeed - Twitterfeed brings RSS to Twitter. Used to notify twitter of updates to your sites feed.
- Summize - Search twitter conversations of points of interest
- Twittergram - Twittergram enables sending a small mp3 via twitter. Also includes an API.
- TwitsLikeMe - TwitsLikeMe claims to be able to find people based on similarities in tweet history
- TwitterMail - Enables posting to Twitter via a special email address. Has neat functions like scheduling.
- TwitterStats - Keep an eye on your Twitter use here
- Twittervision - Connecting tweets to a physical location with Google maps
- Twist - Examine trends on Twitter
- TwitterCal - Send events to Google Calendar via twitter.
- Remember the Milk - A great Twitter enabled reminder service! Build entire to-do lists, update them from Twitter, and recieve them anywhere!
Applications
- Twhirl - A popular Twitter client for your computer. Uses Adobe Air.
- Twitterfox - A Firefox addon that notifies of tweets, replies and messages. Formerly TwitterNotifier.
- Power Twitter - Another addon plugin that enhances Twitter with video, flickr embedding, Tinyurl unwinding and more.
- Twitterbar - A Firefox addon that enables tweets right from the address bar of Firefox.
- Twitterlicious - A Windows Twitter client. x86 and x64 versions available.
- Twadget - A Windows Vista Twitter client that enables posting from the Vista Sidebar
- Twitterific - A Mac OSX Twitter client, also available for the iPhone and iPod Touch.
- TwitterPod - A Mac OSX Twitter client with the ability to store messages.
- gTwitter - A simple GTK+ based Linux Twitter client
- Pwytter - A multi-OS Twitter client. Supports Mac OSX, Linux, and Windows with support for 14 languages.
In Opinion, Social Media
02 Aug, 2008

In recent months, Twitter has got something of a beating from bloggers worldwide about frequent downtime, feature reductions and timeouts.
Originally, I was dismayed and somewhat (perhaps irrationally) angry at the ongoing Twitter problems, but strangely, and unlike many bad services in the past, I didn’t drop Twitter. It was only after a long think about why I’m still on Twitter.
Then it hit me. I’m on Twitter still because of it’s ease of use, the 3rd party tools around it, and the people I follow that encapsulate my interest. Identi.ca is conceptually just as good, being an open platform, but there’s something not quite as interesting as Twitter about it, and I guess it boils down to the myriad following Twitter has.
Twitter has gained a massive following, from bread and butter users, to businesses, government, and developers. Followers using the service remain closer to the individuals/activist groups/news outlets/brands/companies/bands or whatever else they enjoy. Useful services have been built on it’s API, which although suffering from Twitter’s problems, is robust enough to accommodate development, giving back far more than Twitter itself and adding value to the community.
Think of all the services that revolve around or add to Twitter. There’s Summize (recently acquired by Twitter), Tweetstats, Twitterfeed, amongst many, many others. Through clever use of these tools, businesses can use Twitter to analyze trends online, position themselves appropriately, and hear what people are saying about them.
These points are why people remain on Twitter, not just for the personal frippery, but for the relationships between individuals and business that can and are built on the system. It’s not perfect, but it works. For now.
