[Cialug] OT: Twitter users?
Josh More
morej at alliancetechnologies.net
Mon May 19 15:33:53 CDT 2008
Since I was called out, I guess I'll post.
I'm not a fan of twitter. I find that it passively encourages people to
share data before it goes through the mental editing process which
results in increased noise in the signal/noise ratio, increased
misunderstandings and more traffic added to an already busy life.
Moreover, like blogging, there is an echo chamber effect. However,
unlike blogging, it moves more quickly and isn't as persistent as I
would like.
It can be useful in a personal branding perspective... if you want to be
a twit. ;)
More seriously, twitter pushes the speed vs quality balance too far away
from quality for my taste. While it's true that some concepts can be
adequately explored and explained within the character limit of the
service, those concepts do not tend to be the ones you wish to build a
personal brand upon. It has excellent social uses, if you want to be
100% available in your social life. It's great for keeping track of
your daily thoughts and wonderful for getting into the habit of taking
notes. However, those are generally not the sorts of things that I
prefer to share with others, they being a tad too raw for "publishing".
I've seen excellent arguments for other things you can do with the
twitter API and how it's utterly transformative. However, in the end,
even the aggregated quality of a product is only as good as the quality
that goes into it, and I just don't think it's there. Quality may
emerge in something of a long tail phenomenon, but we're not enough into
it to see something like that yet.
You all can start flaming me now. :)
-Josh More, RHCE, CISSP, NCLP, GIAC
morej at alliancetechnologies.net
515-245-7701
>>> "Nathan Stien" <nathanism at gmail.com> 05/19/08 1:50 PM >>>
On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 1:35 PM, Nathan C. Smith
<nathan.smith at ipmvs.com> wrote:
> Funny, I always thought of you as being pragmatic. What value did you
find in Twitter? I'd like to hear Josh ring in on Twitter as well.
Twitter *can* be pragmatic -- it can help you build your "personal
brand", as blogs and such do.
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