You may have heard of Twitter but have no idea what it actually is.
Twitter is basically a powerful mobile social network that enables you
to keep up with the people, businesses, and organizations you’re interested
in — whether you know them personally or not. It also lets you share what
you’re doing with the world — everyone from your family and friends to complete
strangers. (You’ll have to bear with us to find out why you would want
to do that.) Harvard Professor Andrew McAfee (@amcafee) describes Twitter
this way: “With Twitter, my friends are never far away.”
And www.Twitter.com itself says that The New York Times calls Twitter
“one of the fastest-growing phenomena on the Internet.” Time magazine says,
“Twitter is on its way to becoming the next killer app,” and Newsweek noted
that “Suddenly, it seems as though all the world’s a-twitter.” What will you
think?
Every day, we see dozens of new ideas and ways to use Twitter. In this chapter,
we do our best to introduce the basic ideas and explain how Twitter
works and why it’s so powerful.
Figuring Out This Twitter Thing
Twitter is a fast-evolving, surprisingly powerful new way to exchange ideas
and information, and stay in touch with people, businesses, and organizations
that you care about. It’s a social network — a kind of map of who you
know and who you’re interested in (whether you know them personally or
not) — that you can access from your computer or your cellphone.
Twitter has one central feature: It lets users instantly post entries of 140
characters or less, known as tweets, through the www.Twitter.com site or
your cellphone, or by way of the numerous applications that are available for
both. On the most basic level, Twitter is a mobile social network that combines elements
of short messaging services (SMS or texting), instant-messaging communication
tools, such as AOL Instant Messenger (AIM), and blog publishing
software, such as Blogger or WordPress. Like blogging, your tweets are generally
published to the world at large where anyone can read them on Twitter.
com (unless you choose a private account, so that only those you choose can
see your tweets). Unlike blogging, you’re limited to just 140 characters. Like
instant messaging, you can communicate directly with people (through direct
messages), but unlike instant messaging, each message has its own unique
resource locator (URL), so each message is actually a Web page. Instant messaging
also lacks the social network “following” features of Twitter and basic
ideas like “publish-subscribe” and one-to-many broadcasting of messages.
Think you can’t say anything meaningful in 140 characters? Think again. Not
only are twitterers innovating clever forms of one-liners, haiku, quotes, and
humor, but they’re including links — in 23 percent of all tweets by one
measure — and links carry a lot more information and context. Writing
140-character messages seems trivial. But headlines and very short advertising
copy are famously hard to do really well — and known to be powerful.
The idea of Twitter sounds simple — even a little too simple. But when you
think that millions of people around the world are posting Twitter messages,
following other people’s Twitter streams, and responding to one another, you
can start to see the significance behind Twitter’s appeal. True, Twitter can
look like it’s full of noise. But once you find interesting people and accounts
to follow, your Twitter stream shifts from a cascade of disjointed chatter to
one of the most versatile, useful online communications tools yet seen —
that is, if you take the time to learn to use that tool correctly
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