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The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
Celebrity will help it off the ground.
What it does to cultivate that community, encourage useful content, and filter out the spam / crap / gaming, however, is an altogether different issue.
Welcome to Web2.0, Guy. Time to walk the walk. ;)
Cheers
t @ dji
Sincerely,
Ted Murphy, Pay Per Post
Scoble, I've asked before on posts here why you don't interview him for a video. He's one of the most valuable people in the industry, and arguably the best speaker author for startups and marketing. His no BS, no bozos approach is refreshing, enlightening, and entertaining.
The younger crowd is on Facebook, MySpace, Bebo, IM, and a variety of other platforms that provide much more utility than Twitter. IM, Facebook, and Bebo even include Twitter-like functionality. All these applications provide SMS functionality, infact IM services were first. The older generation is simply discovering ways to use tools that the younger generation has grasped for ages. How do you sell Twitter to a teen who's been using IM et al their entire life?
And for the older generation, here's a good test. When I got my parents on MSN, I sold them on the fact that we could chat back and forth in real time. If I were to ask my parents to join Facebook, I'd tell them they could network with past high school and work collegues. I'd probably have a hard time selling MySpace or Bebo. But, why would they want to join Twitter? So they broadcast their lives to the entire world? They would probably be more comfortable using Facebook to broadcast information to their closed group of friends and family. In my opinion, if an application can pass the 'parent test', there's something amazingly powerful. Facebook was incredibly smart not to sell.
As for Truemors, it's very strange that Kawasaki is involved. He's usually very adamant, especially in his talks, about avoiding the latest social network wannabees.
Some other "killer" thingie will come out soon and people will forget all about Twitter.
People see stuff like Twitter and they think they've found some kind of panacea.
Guy Kawasaki sees and has seen it all. Men like him know the industry, the key players, and can more or less see where the industry is heading. I'll take Guy's thoughts over almost anyone elses.
Why?
Robert linked to Tony
Tony linked to Techcrunch
Techcrunch linked to Truemors
I haven't got to the Truemor's tab yet in Firefox, but thought it odd that so few were linking direct, plus giving attribution to source.
Plus features?
1. The pages are being updated with Ajax. I am not a programmer, but I doubt it would be too much work to get a theme adjusted to include Ajax and live updates.
2. Some time was spent on implementing additional methods of posting, but they might just send the posts to the posting email address, thus I doubt it was too hard to integrate.
I think it could have been done in such a way to be more "multimedia", and at the same time require some kind of registration or authentication.
- Squidoo
- Bitpass (a-ha! another lemon Kawasaki bet on with a dark finish)
- Odeo
All had prominent people pushing them and while that helped pimp put some blogger juice and clubby backslapping at the end of the day a business model it did not make.
Maybe it won't ever be a digg, but if it only took a few thousand dollars to develop, it doesn't need to be.
Blowhard vs Blowhard.
To the death! Fight ON! Don't hold back!