Tag Archives: Twitter

#eqnz

The Christchurch earthquake – and the tragedy unfolding in its wake – has stunned us all. But, in between the stories of bravery, local heroism and national response, there have been occasional moments where something has caught my attention because it is odd or unusual.

For me, it was the moment in Parliament on Tuesday 22 February, when Bill English asked people to stay off the phone lines and use texting instead. And it was the moment when a bizarre email from a friend made me think something had happened – and Twitter was my first source for immediate news. Both were, even at the time, in the midst of the devastating news, an odd reminder of the way technology is part of how we communicate.

This infographic from Mashable highlights the way online networks are now firmly centre stage during times when news is breaking; when the person in the street is at the heart of the story; when good, and bad, news travels faster than ever before.

If anyone still doubts the power of an online community, a social network or 140 character messages to have real impact on people’s lives, they have only to look at the messages coming through on the day of the earthquake, and still streaming through in the days afterwards, to be persuaded otherwise.

 

Twitter: 3 ways to tell if it’s part of you

You know that Twitter has entered your daily subconscious when:

1. It’s the first place you think to go to in moments of excitement…an earthquake (like #eqnz) , a thunderstorm…a new/scarey/exciting experience is a shared one.

2. Talking to strangers seems perfectly normal. There are some great ideas, thoughts, tips and advice out there. Who cares if you know the person who is helping you or not? They won’t be strangers for long.

3. Anything longer than 140 characters seems unnecessary. Just #tag it or link it. The best ideas are the concise ones that lead you off down exciting new paths.

Image source: http://www.hongkiat.com/blog/nice-twitter-wallpaper/

Unrequited love on Twitter: are they really worth it?

You on Twitter? Then you’ve been there…that moment when you realise that the person you’re following just doesn’t love you back.

I’m not talking about “I follow you, so you follow me” (which is just not how it works) but those people (and they’re usually super famous, in marketing, or celeb-types) that hardly follow anybody…but everyone follows them.

Find these people  (and they’re often the ones you find when you’re just starting out as a newbie-Tweeter:”Look who else is here!”) – and you have a dilemma.

Follow them – and be just a statistic, one of the herd? One of 1,174, 349 if you admire @stephenfry?  One of 5,770,814 if you adore @ladygaga?

Ignore them – and miss out on their ideas, erudite comments or the latest goss from LA (“summer has finally hit LA and I got a cold..WHAT????!!!!” gasps @mrskutcher)

Or, you can take the third way – and try to charm them with your own ideas, erufite comments and goss. Good luck with that.

I’m not for a moment suggesting that Stephen or Ms Gaga, are in that category (although I’m disappointed in Elmo). But I’m wondering (from my clearly ‘collaborative’ point of view) if someone is all about broadcast, are they worth following?