Good morning AoIRs, As I am glued to the #jan25 twitter feed for a week now, I thought I'd share with you some of the technology related photos and tweets that drew my attention. I wondered how Egyptian bloggers and tweeps keep updating from the square without their phone battery dying. It seems they found a solution to charge their phones on site, this picture was tweeted yesterday: http://yfrog.com/h4qeebnj Another tweep mentioned that many of the protest signs in Tahrir square carry the logos of Facebook and Twitter as Egyptians are aware of the role of these platforms in the protest. I haven't seen a picture of such a sign and if anyone has it I'd love the reference, but this was tweeted yesterday: http://www.mylinksmyads.com/link/ag1teXR3ZWV0c215YWRzcisLEgRMaW5rIiE3Mjk0MDI... Apparently it says "we thank you facebook youth of Egypt". I've heard this reference to the new generation of Egyptian youth as "the facebook youth" on a few occasions during this week. To those of you interested in language, discourse and humor: twitter saw around 5 fake accounts of Hosni Mubarak, some are really very funny and kept the humor going even in the darkest hours of the clashes on Wednesday and Thursday. See: @TheReal_Mubarak @GMubarak @HosniMobarak @NotHosniMubarak @presidenthosni Also, some of tweets that were retweeted during the first days of the uprising were using the language of social media to express the events. The ones I collected were: @samihtoukan: The People just ousted Mubarak as the mayor of Egypt on @foursquare #jan25 (via @Mayousef) @tsweden: BREAKING: Hilary Clinton 'unfriends' Hosni Mubarak on Facebook. @kshaheen: Mubarak to change his facebook relationship status with egypt to "it's complicated" @SarahZaaimi: a twitter user: Are they any anti-mubarak apps available for the iphone? Enjoy, Carmel Vaisman http://www.absolutecarmel.com Twitter @carmelva