The Eye
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Another Eye to the World
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07 Jul 08 Do You Tweet?

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Me I’ve seen a number of debates recently about the of social media services. Twitter has been high on the list of services under the spotlight – mostly due to it’s sporadic up time of late.

I do sometimes wonder what kind of these services have. No obvious advertising, and no fees to pay, how do they make money? How do they make enough money to run the service, let alone make a profit from their . Ok, I know in the largely open source can sometimes be a dirty world, along with charges, fees and subscriptions, but at the end of the day, however much you’re developing a service or application, you’ve got to eat.

Anyway, I digress.

The point of this article is to make a response to the many comparisons I’ve seen between some of the services.

Twitter is often compared to Plurk. I use both, but I see them as completely different services. Twitter is great in that you can start a conversation on the computer, and seamlessly move to the , and back. As for the noise, well, there is always going to be a ratio. We all post stuff that we think interesting to some of our followers or friends, but which in fact, isn’t.

Here’s a . I’m not interested in getting an , for a number of reasons that I won’t go into right now. Much as I like to read up on , and have done so on the iPhone, it was a screaming noise on Twitter when the first phone came out, and there were a multitude of messages from people giving a running commentary on their status in the line outside the store to get theirs.

However, I didn’t un-follow all these people. I knew they were as excited about their new gadget as I wasn’t. I knew they’d get over it and move on. They did. I’m sure I’ll be equally boring to some when I get a new .

I enjoy Plurk sometimes, but it’s much . and I find it harder to re-trace earlier conversations at times. It’s all over the place compared to Twitter, and as yet, I can’t use it via SMS, although there is a mobile page.

A different animal to Twitter though, and I don’t see why each cannot co-exist.

The last service I’d like to look at is FriendFeed. I’ve recently joined this, and I wish I’d joined a lot earlier. It’s really like a feed agregator, but I find it useful for snippets of information that I didn’t know about, and while I can get much of the same stuff in Google Reader, FriendFeed focuses it for me. I also like the daily email summary feature. Takes a few seconds to scan down the list, and chose stuff I think I’d like to read. With Google Reader, I tend to subcribe to interesting feeds, and then don’t get the time to read them. With FriendFeed I can at least read some I’d bypass due to time constraints.

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