Diving into the depths of the communications world…discussing current events and trends affecting the ever evolving PR profession.
The website is called Twitter, the action is called ‘tweeting’ and the question remains as whether Twitter is all hype or whether Twitter is here to stay. For those that are not familiar with Twitter, the user logs on to the Twitter web page and creates a user name and profile, then one has a 140 character limit to write (or rather ‘tweet’) about whatever comes to mind.
Recently, the New York Times published an article, Putting Twitter’s World to Use, which had some fascinating applications. For instance, Corey Menscher, a grad student at New York University, developed Kickbee, an elastic band with vibration sensors that his pregnant wife wore to alert Twitter each time the baby kicked: “I kicked Mommy at 08:52 PM on Fri, Jan 2!” Mr. Menscher is now considering introducing the product into the mainstream market.

Corey and Ellen Menscher developed a device that would alert Twitter each time the baby kicked when she was pregnant with Tyler.
Another interesting example is at Detroit’s Henry Ford Hospital. Here the doctors were twittered throughout an operation to remove a brain tumor from a 47-year-old man. Tweets included: “A portion of the skull is being removed to allow access to the dura, the lining of the brain”. The article said that, “Medical residents and curious laymen following online asked the doctors what music they were listening to (Loreena McKennitt, a Celtic singer), whether the patient felt pain in the brain (no, just pressure) and how big the tumor was (the size of a golf ball). As is convention on Twitter, they tagged all their tweets with a keyword so anyone could search for the keyword and read the stream of posts.”
I think that takes tweeting to a bit of an extreme. I don’t think I would want doctors twittered during my surgery. Better to focus on task at hand and I hope they are not crowd sourcing the next step. But it just goes to show how explosive and far reaching this social platform is, being adapted to many different scenarios.
The article states that Twitter’s most productive use has been for businesses that want to better understand their customers, citing Dell and Starbucks. According to the article, some developers are creating tools to help companies “keep an eye on the buzz“. Akshay Java, a scientist at Microsoft, is trying to figure out a way to identify which experts are most influential on given topics by automatically analyzing the content of their tweets and who is in their Twitter network. Companies like Microsoft could use that information to figure out which ‘twitterers’ they should contact to create buzz about a new product.
So is Twitter a “colossal waste of time?” For some, yes, but for businesses who use it to market their products to an estimated 10 million users and growing, they would probably give a more positive response. I wouldn’t second guess 10 million users and call Twitter a fad. In 140 characters or less, it’s pure marketing genius!
After my recent posts on the atrocious ‘R’ word..I thought all my readers could use some laughs.
April Fools Day has always provided a license to the media to print and broadcast bizarre and fanciful tales. From television revealing that spaghetti grows on trees, to advertisements for the left-handed burger, the tradition of April Fool’s Day stories in the media has a weird and wacky history.
This year more than ever social media has followed in the footsteps of its conventional cousin. Here are some of the best..
Youtube’s ‘Country Filter’ has resulted in UK viewers getting Australian settings all videos they view, resulting in inversion of clips and text.
GMail has introduced an autoresponder that reads and responds to your e-mail so you don’t have to. The problems kick in when two parties both turn it on “two Gmail accounts can happily converse with each other for up to three messages each. Beyond that, our experiments have shown a significant decline in the quality ranking of Autopilot’s responses.”
Labour MP Tom Harris backs a blogging counter terrorism bill “from April 2010, every British blogger will have to submit each post for official approval”.
The Guardian will publish its content exclusively on twitter consigning the print editions to the footnotes of history. The Guardian and Twitter will also launch Gutter, a service designed to “filter noteworthy liberal opinion from the cacophony of Twitter updates”.
….Oh and the entire internet is being rebooted.
Press F13 on your keyboard to access a complete list of the best social web April Fools pranks
T.M.I. (Too Much Information) is often a comment attached to status updates on Facebook, Myspace ,Twitter and similar sites. Users are often accused of posting excessive personal information on these networking websites. Perhaps one may update their status to innocently notify their friends of the latest going-ons in their life. Everyone from your butcher to your first crush from kindergarten is on Facebook, and it’s interesting to connect.
In an ever advancing technological age, blogging is no longer a privilege of the web savvy. In its condensed form (about 140 characters), blogging is a quick and fun way to let people know what you are doing or thinking at any given moment. A micro cerebral snapshot, if you will. All harmless, right? Well, not while ‘Big Brother’ is watching, which is apparently- all the time.
Kimberly Swann, a young Brit, is enjoying her 15 minutes of fame as a result of such an online indulgence. Swann joined the multitudes of unemployed when her boss discovered, via her Facebook status, that she was “bored at work”. How many times per week (or even per day) do you post similar updates? Would you have thought it’s an offence that could get you sacked?!
On these sites, I’m sure many have said far worse about their place of work. Should they watch out for their jobs too? Where does one draw the line between freedom of expression and insubordination/ incompetence? Was the real issue here her “boredom” or perusing Facebook while she was supposed to be working? Or both?
Embedded video from CNN Video
In this amusing CNN segment, a journalist carries out a search for the key words “bored” and “work” on the uber- popular (not to mention highly addictive) Facebook and Twitter. Unsurprisingly, many share Swann’s lack of enthusiasm.
According to Kimberly’s boss, her candid revelation of Facebook was a clear indication that she “wasn’t happy” there and consequently “it wasn’t going to work out.” The question that we should all be asking is how her boss found out about her status in the first place, on company time might I add. Was he “bored” too?