Posts tagged ‘twitter’

April 15, 2010

How is TweetNotes different from a Twitter Archive Service?

by Ben Rigby

Just got a question from the Progressive Exchange email list asking about the difference between our TweetNotes product and a Twitter archiving tool like Twapperkeeper. Here's the response: 

1. TweetNotes is free. 30 seconds setup time and you'll be on your way. Setup page here: http://bxt.me/a5q3hf [this isn't a point of differentiation - just an answer to part of the question on PX]

2. The difference between TweetNotes and a Twitter archive service is severalfold: 

a) Frame the conversation

As an event organizer, you probably want to frame the conversation… to provide some curation and guidance. TweetNotes gives you a space to do this by adding a presentation (Slideshare, etc). It's like giving an opening introduction to your topic at a conference.

b) Dashboard for conferences/events

If you've got multiple hashtags for multiple events, such as for sessions at a conference, TweetNotes allows you to organize them all in one neat branded place. See the example dashboard for NTC: http://bxt.me/9py0L1. As a result, you can see which sessions are the most Tweeted… which is a neat proxy for determining popularity/interest in various topics.

c) See people! 

Tweetnotes shows you who is tweeting and who's tweeting the most. It visualizes the "people in the room"…

d) Embeddable.

You can embed TweetNotes in your blog or website. Check out how Amy Sample Ward embedded her NTC session's TweetNotes into her blog at http://bxt.me/cEKALu

d) Make Tweets Better

The Extraordinaries is a platform for microvolunteering… and TweetNotes is no exception. The big vision here is to take the flurry of tweets that start at an event and ask volunteers to turn them into a more refined / filtered / and curated set of notes. Rating tweets is the first step in this direction. We'll be rolling out additional features in the very near future that allow us all to collaborate on these topics to create valuable public outputs.

What do you think? 

Love to get some feedback/ideas/criticism/whatever! 

April 19 – Adding a Followup about Real Time Uses:
The product is not intended to function as a Twitter client replacement. There's no way it's going to be as good for that as TweetDeck or the like. It does have 2 good real time uses though: 

1) if you have multiple/simultaneous events at a conference, it can show you which sessions are the most popular (by number of tweets). At SXSW, this was a neat way to see what the most talked about sessions were and to get caught up on what happened at the event… or to change sessions mid stream to head to the more exciting one.

2) if you have a Q&A component of a session, you can use the voting mechanism as a realtime way to see the top questions. It's so hard as a panelist to scan Tweets while talking… TweetNotes offers an easy way to allow the crowd to filter up the best questions. 

Other than these two real time uses – its value is in the post-event scenario – where people can go back through the tweets – to remember a point – or to lookup a URL that was mentioned, to help refine the tweets into a summary from which people who were not at the event can benefit. And to read specific tweet threads by specific people about that topic. 

April 11, 2010

Twitter Hashtag Strategies for Conferences & Events

by Ben Rigby

We've just wrapped up tracking the 2010 NTC Conference tweets. You can find the results here http://app.beextra.org/tweetnotes/event/id/ntc

There were a few interesting learnings that came out of the experiment. 

1. There is a lot of value in coordinating hashtags for sessions PRIOR to the event.

This allows people (like me) who can't go to track conversations that I'd like to follow at the conference. In addition, it enables companies such as mine (and those that are to come in this space) to create neat tools like the one listed above that will provide ongoing value from all of the tweets generated at the event.

In this instance, Holly Ross from NTEN was so kind as to ask session leaders for their hashtags in a survey and sent me the list ahead of time, which made my job 1000 times easier than it was at SXSW, where I had to monitor trending conversations by the minute. Even so, there were a good number of hashtags that changed and many that were unlisted. So I still had to do a lot of monitoring and I've undoubtedly missed some (please post a comment here if I have). 

2. Hashtags with periods don't work. 

For NTC, the hashtag format chosen was "10ntc.sessionname" … the period threw off a lot of automatic hashtag parsers in Twitter clients. Next time, I suggest using just an intercap such as 10ntcSessionname. Clearly, shorter the better.

3. Allow session leaders to choose their own hashtags – or take a lot of time picking good tags. 

At SXSW, the conference organizers did actually pre-select hashtags, but they were crazy long, like #mythumbsonfirefromtoolongtags,… and, predictably, no one used the long tags. They just chose shorter ones at the outset of the panels, which caused mass hashtag confusion. I know that getting panelists to choose and submit their hashtags ahead of time is going to be difficult, so just taking some time to choose good ones may do the trick in the future. However, I'd make a case to panelists that their panels will get N% more exposure and will generate more value with a good tag chosen in advance. With all of the new twitter tools these days, it's only going to become more of a necessity. 

4. Should we use the same tags at multiple conferences or choose unique ones?

This is kind of an interesting question. Using a hashtag and a tool like the one we created (above), you could track conversations about topics across conferences. At NTC, @kanter and @afine's session called "The Networked Nonprofit" using the tag #networkednp was a big hit. At the next conference, should they use the same tag to continue the conversation? Or should they lock it away and consider that topic closed and wrapped up for that conference, to take another form another day. Should a tool like ours turn off Twitter polling so that the conversation gets sealed up – or leave it open so that people can continue to discuss. 

5. What happens to conversations after the conference? 

This is a big one. I always hear at conferences that people would like to "continue the conversation"… but it never happens. (Not necessarily in answer to my question above), it occurs to me that we could use hashtags to create a sort of ongoing conference session. Of course, people do already follow certain tags, but without being able to visualize the collection of tweets and people tweeting, it feels more fleeting. However, in building out and using our Twitter tool, it started to feel to me more like a *place* — like a location where there was conversation and where you could *see* the people speaking. With some more UI work, I'm thinking that there's a tool here that would enable us to continue these Twitter conversations in such a way gave it more of the vibrancy of the real-life event – and that could actually continue the conversation.

What do you think?

May 4, 2009

Apple rejects Twitter feeds in iPhone apps

by Ben Rigby

This could be big trouble - 

Apple has rejected several apps because they have Twitter feeds in them – on the basis that the Twitter feeds might contain objectionable langauge. Commentary from Engadget:

"Apple's just reached a whole new level of stupidity in App Store approval shenanigans: the Tweetie 1.3 update was just rejected for displaying "offensive language" in its Twitter trend search view. Right, not for offensive language in the app itself, but for offensive language on Twitter — an insanely strict new standard that could conceivably be used to reject each and every iPhone Twitter client out there. (And if you haven't noticed, there are quite a few iPhone Twitter clients.) Hell, Apple might as well reject the next versions of Safari and Mail, since they can display dirty words too — and let's not forget the awful things people are doing with Notes and the camera. Better lock it down."

Right. This is a big problem. 
April 8, 2009

Twitter Traffic Explodes. Twitter for Volunteers.

by Ben Rigby

Twitter-chart1
Well, it's confirmed- that feeling over the last month or so that Twitter is everywhere is now confirmed by the stats. Check out this post at ComScore. Interesting to note that the demographics skew more towards GenX and young Boomers than Millenials.

What's clear about these trends is that for volunteering to work, especially the online kind, it's gotta tie right into these types of social networks. It's where social reputation and connection is happening – which is what's at the core of making a volunteer feel good about doing work. 
Twitter-chart2
October 30, 2008

twittervotereport.com

by Ben Rigby

My friend Nathan just sent an email around about an app he built that interface's with Twittervotereport which was built by volunteers in partnership with techPresident; it turns your phone into an on-the-spot volunteer election reporting mechanism. The aggregate effect will be to visualize reporting problems around the nation in real time. Election monitoring orgs have been dreaming about this for eons!!  Here's the email from Nathan:

Just wanted to make sure y'all knew about this: http://twittervotereport.com

I built an app for the new G1/Android phone that uses your GPS location
to accurately track where you are reporting from:
http://openideals.com/2008/10/30/votereport-for-android-094/

Twitter Vote Report is an all-volunteer network of software developers,
designers, and other collaborators have teamed up with the award-winning
blog techPresident to launch this effort.  The only resources
contributed to this project are the participants’ time and expertise!
Millions of Americans will be voting this Election Day. Many of these
voters will have terrific experiences and we’d love to hear about
those.  But many voters will experience voting problems that we have
been hearing about for years: long lines, broken machines, and
registered voters who can’t vote because their names aren’t showing up
on the registration rolls. Using Twitter Vote Report, voters will be
able to share their experiences and resources with one another to solve
problems quickly (e.g. “don’t come now, the line is too long”). These
messages will then be aggregated and mapped so that we can “see” voting
problems around the country in real-time.

Spread the word!

Oh hey, i just found this press release in my email from Alison Fine, author of Momentum and apparently writing now at TechPresident.

Hey, friends, just three weeks to the day since Nancy Scola and I hatched the idea of using Twitter to report Election Day experiences and problems, this morning Twitter Vote Report (www.twittervotereport.com) went live!  And now I need your help to get the word out!!  Please participate on Election Day and share this with your friends around the block and around the country, blog about it, email organizations you work with or know of.  I've also attached a news release, just fyi:

Twitter Vote Reports enables individual voters to use their cell phones to report on their individual experiences – the good, bad and ugly. How long is the wait in Cleveland, Ohio? Are the new optical scan machines staying up and running in Palm Beach County, Florida? Is failure to bring ID to the polls thwarting first-time voters in Indianapolis? With Twitter Vote Report, we’ll know the answers to those questions straight from voters from all over the country.  Using this system, voters can help one another to find the best time to go to the polls or find their new polling place, and we can also aggregate and map the messages to "see" in real time where the problem are for the election protection folks to do what they do best.

A large number of groups working on voter outreach and protection efforts have joined this effort.  They include: the 866-OUR-VOTE (The Election Protection Coalition), Rock the Vote, Credo Mobile, Common Cause, Plodt.com, YouTube, twittervision.com, NPR's Social Media Desk, Independence Year Foundation, Center for Community Change, Student PIRGs, PBS, Women Donors Network, and Demos.   A complete list of participating groups is on the website.

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