Showing posts with label twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label twitter. Show all posts

February 25, 2007

Tube 2.0

I just ran across this post about a guy using Twitter to broadcast real-time London Tube delays. Now that’s a very useful thing to do with Twitter, and is definitely headed in the direction I had in mind for using Twitter as a message delivery API.

I’d sure love to have this for the 1B and D buses that I now take to and from work every day. PAT are you listening? No? I thought not.

February 16, 2007

Words in my T9 dictionary

Today, while posting a lunchtime Twitter “waiting for a burrito in the long ass line at qdoba” from my phone, I learned that both “burrito” (2877486), and “ass” (277) are in my Nokia 6682’s T9 dictionary by default (unfortunately, “qdoba” is not).

I don’t know if that’s useful to anyone who isn’t standing in a long ass line waiting for a burrito, but I was both surprised and pleased. It’s the little things, you know.

February 7, 2007

IMified and that Twitter idea

A short while back, I posted about the possibility of Twitter becoming an input modality and a information delivery service. I just found IMified (via LifeHacker), and it sounds like it does a lot of the things I was envisioning, but uses IM directly as the transport, rather that Twitter. They seem to have several interesting points of integration (look at the icons in the main graphic) already.

One thing that will be interesting to see is whether they strive to provide an additional integration across the multiple services that they talk to.

I still think Twitter would provide a more useful layer of integration since it allows various input (including IM) and output methods. I’ll probably sign up for a free IMified account to evaluate it and post some thoughts later.

January 25, 2007

Twitter as a message router?

Twitter is fun, no doubt about it, but I think the novelty of it is starting to give way to some interest in finding ways to make it more useful. I had been thinking about it for a while (almost ever since I started using Twitter), but this post on their blog, pointing to Eric Meyer’s post got my wheels turning again. If Twitter had the notion of public and private posts (as Eric points out), it would be fairly trivial to do some interesting stuff with it.

It could be used as an input layer abstraction for various other web services I already use. For example, I could post something like “cal: lunch with Bob tomorrow 9am” from my mobile, and use a service like rssfwd to have posts routed to Gmail, where I could set up a filter that would forward it to 30boxes. If I happen to want to start using Backpack calendar instead of 30boxes, I probably rig up something similar. The key is that I would still create events using Twitter—only they would go to Backpack instead of 30boxes.

I could do something similar with notes that I want to send to my Backpack page or to Stikkit from my mobile. In essence, it could be used to add an SMS interface to apps that don’t already have one.

Similarly, it could be used as an delivery system for more useful things. For example, it might be interesting to setup a Twitter stream for team meeting reminders, that way the meeting could be scheduled on a single calendar, but a reminder could be broadcast via Twitter to all the team members who have added that private team meeting Twitter feed as a “friend”. Granted, that could be done by setting up an email group or alias, and using SMS gateways, but I think Twitter could present a much more elegant solution by abstracting away the particular calendar service being used. I think that’s just scratching the surface, too.

At it’s core, RSS is a message delivery mechanism, and Twitter puts a useful, near real time face on it. Who knows what the Twitter developers have in mind, but for an app that is about nothing, it sure seems like it has big possibilities.

January 23, 2007

twittereeze

Yesterday I started working on an Applescript that would set my Twitter status and my iChat status if iChat was running. I’m sure this kind of thing has been obvious to most people who have started using Twitter, but I hadn’t found any app that had done it yet. Today, along comes twittereeze, and totally blows away what I was doing in Applescript because it uses SIMBL to integrate seamlessly with IconFactory’s wonderful Twitterrific.

Well done. No more applescript for me.