2009/7/1 Yosem Companys <companys@stanford.edu>:
There is also the approach of buying followers. I keep seeing online ads that for something like $50 you can buy 500 followers.
On Wed, Jul 1, 2009 at 1:55 PM, Dave Karpf <davekarpf@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi folks, Compare those to twitter-via-laptop or -desktop and you have a completely different user experience. I never used twitter until I downloaded tweetie, because I found it a less-appealing distraction than facebook and a couple of favored blogs and discussion boards. With the mobile client, I now check twitter while waiting in line for coffee or sitting at a red light. Mobility and platform have a huge impact on how I'm experiencing the medium, and that in turn shapes my normative opinions about how people should and should not use the medium.
I hate that when people quote pages of other people's sayings before even starting their own post. ;) -- Christophe. Le 3 juil. 09 à 15:11, Emma Duke-Williams a écrit :
2009/7/1 Yosem Companys <companys@stanford.edu>:
There is also the approach of buying followers. I keep seeing online ads that for something like $50 you can buy 500 followers.
On Wed, Jul 1, 2009 at 1:55 PM, Dave Karpf <davekarpf@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi folks, Compare those to twitter-via-laptop or -desktop and you have a completely different user experience. I never used twitter until I downloaded tweetie, because I found it a less-appealing distraction than facebook and a couple of favored blogs and discussion boards. With the mobile client, I now check twitter while waiting in line for coffee or sitting at a red light. Mobility and platform have a huge impact on how I'm experiencing the medium, and that in turn shapes my normative opinions about how people should and should not use the medium.
I've read this thread & the one about "Trivial Twittering". As others have pointed out, what's trivial to me, mayn't be trivial to others. Also, most of the people who I've heard to grumble about twitter being full of trivia about breakfast are generally using that as a reason not to use it - rather than those that have used it.
Someone else also mentioned getting annoyed about apps that post to twitter; I've not installed any, nor do I think that many of my contacts have, as I rarely see them. I guess, though, I've done the equivalent in the past of feeding twitter to facebook. I didn't leave it there long, as I realised that I get bored with other people's twitter to facebook updates, so I've disabled it. I still have a lot of friends who do it - so maybe it doesn't bother them as much. Or perhaps they don't think about it - who knows. (And do the app users enjoy reading what their contacts apps have posted, do they not know how to disable them, or don't they care?)
There's another person I follow who complains no end about people using #tags for conferences they're at - yet others find them very useful.
Looking at some of the "How To " Guides for Twitter, it strikes me that many of the authors believe that *their* way of using Twitter is the best; and thus others should use it in the same way. But, going back to the example of the tweeter who hates #tags - and those of us who like them. Who's "right"? Is anyone?
My personal view is that we should use it as we see fit; sure, there is always a role for sharing of what we consider to be best practice for us, but it's ultimately what suits me best that I'll do.
Someone also mentioned buying followers ... there was an article about that on the BBC website yesterday: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8130456.stm
-- Emma Duke-Williams: School of Computing/ Faculty eLearning Co-ordinator, University of Portsmouth, UK. Blog: http://userweb.port.ac.uk/~duke-wie/blog/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/emmadw SL: Emmadw Rickenbacker _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/