Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009 at
8:53 am

Friendorfollow is a very simple Twitter web-based tool which does a few things: find out how many people are not following you back. As well as who is following you but aren’t being followed by you. You can then sort them according factors like Name, Location, Followers and even account age.
The best thing about it? You don’t need to log in or give away your password. Just enter your username and you’re done. It’s the fastest way to check who is not following you back.
Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009 at
3:10 am

Twibes helps you to recommend people you follow on Twitter to your Twitter followers. By logging in, you can pick and choose 5 names by clicking on their avatars or type in their full username. After which, Twibes will allow you to send an update to your Twitter account with one click. Your followers will then see your recommendations and they can head to Twibes to check out more.
Tuesday, April 21st, 2009 at
1:46 pm

Created by Franz Enzenhofer over at the Face Saerch blog, the nifty Google Twitter integration script allows you to get the above results (notice the ‘Twitter’ tab on the nav bar).
What this means is that Twitter search is set up alongside Google: when you’re typing in a keyword using Google’s search engine, you’re automatically searching for the same thing at Twitter as well.
First things first. You need to be using the Firefox browser because this involves using greasemonkey. After you’ve got both Firefox and greasemonkey, you can click to install the script.
Tuesday, April 21st, 2009 at
9:44 am

As you may have heard, there’s a new Twitter desktop client in town and its name is Tweetie. Formely an iPhone Twitter app, it was released today as Tweetie for Mac. It’s a feature-rich native client, not something built using Adobe AIR (like most other popular Twitter clients).
I’ll link out to some of the in-depth reviews I’ve read about Tweetie for Mac.
Tweetie for Mac: Better Web Worker Soluton?:
Tuesday, April 21st, 2009 at
6:02 am

TwitterJobSearch is a search engine that attempts to allow job seekers to find jobs through Twitter. Created by WorkDigital, a London-based company, this allows you to do a quick keyword search and specify the location (eg. event planner in Chicago). According to their about page:
Until now, search engines for social media sites merely looked for words. We’re looking at context. We use semantic tools to look at what was said. We then look at what they’ve said before. We then look at who was saying it. If we do this right, we can figure out why they’re saying anything at all.
Tuesday, April 21st, 2009 at
2:28 am

Have too much time on your hands? Maybe you would want to integrate Twitter with a physical object in your environment. It’s not difficult to do as long as you have the right equipment. That’s what someone did when they decided to set up a Twitter account for an office chair and set it so that it tweets when the sitter farts:
The Twittering office chair “tweets” (posts a Twitter update) upon the detection of natural gas such as that produced by human flatulence. This is part of my commitment to accurately document and share my life as it happens.
Monday, April 20th, 2009 at
1:57 pm

Let me start by saying that I have nothing against celebrities or people who like celebrities. They’re entertaining (at times) and I think some of them are good people.
The recent avalanche of celebrities into Twitter has generated an incredible amount of mass media attention, which undoubtedly resulted in a huge influx of new users. A lot of them signed up just to follow their favorite celebrities, which is good for Twitter in a way.
We all know that Twitter is now a mainstream phenomenon like Facebook, especially after it was promoted by Oprah yesterday. Twitter was already growing rapidly but Oprah is pretty much the most powerful form of mainstream validation you can get.
Monday, April 20th, 2009 at
10:30 am

Ever wanted to see what people are posting in real-time to Twitpic, the popular image sharing website for Twitter users? Now you can with twipick, a real-time stream of pictures posted to Twitpic.
Not only can you view the latest Twitpic images but you can also do a keyword search for just about anything, although you aren’t likely to get results for obscure terms. The search engine seems to pull results based on keywords used in comments and descriptions on twitpic, which means you might not always get what you’re looking for. But still it offers fairly good results.
Monday, April 20th, 2009 at
5:00 am

Just read a Reuter’s article on how diners and restaurants are using Twitter to promote their menu and brand. Here are some tactics I found interesting from LA restaurants/diners:
Quinn Hatfield, of Hatfield’s restaurant in Beverly Hills, tweets the ins and outs of creating dishes, punctuated with the occasional mouth-watering picture.
Rush Street’s Nick Kaufman likes to reward people who tweet while they are dining at the Culver City eatery with things like free drinks.
“It’s kind of like I’m the man behind the curtain,” said Kaufman, who handles the restaurant’s online marketing. “People realize if they follow us they may get something out of it
Sunday, April 19th, 2009 at
6:55 pm

There are many ways to use Twitter. You can use the standard web interface or a desktop Twitter client like twhirl or tweetdeck. And then there is another way, web interfaces which add an extra layer of features not found on the default Twitter site.
Tweetree is one of them. You log into Tweetree just like you would at Twitter.com and use Twitter from there. What are the benefits using Tweetree, you might ask?
- Indented Messages. You can get a better context of what’s going on because you see the posts people are replying to.