Twittered Out
One night everyone and their grandmother heard about this thing called Twitter and started joining it. Twitter was pretty nifty, a nice little tool where you could shoot a short message from your computer or phone and let folks know what you were up to.
But Twitter’s open API invites third party applications that have made it not only easier to tweet but allow you to tweet just about anything: blog posts, currently listening to, whether or not you washed your hands after you flushed the toilet, and on and on.
And this is where Twitter lost me.
Twitter is a nice tool to supplement an online presence. These days, most everyone has a blog or Facebook profile, and Twitter provides a simple extension to the content you might put on those pages. It was a way to add filler to your virtual content, thoughts between the conversations and rants.
But now it’s more than that. It’s a social network summary itself, an aggregate of every piece of Web 2.0 that someone might be a part of and that’s where it gets overwhelming, not just for me but maybe for Twitter’s servers as well since it’s been down more often than not this last week.
Twitter doesn’t strike me as serving well as a funnel of information about people. There are other applications more suited for that, something like Friendfeed, but even then, there are times when too much information just turns me off to a service or even a friend.
There have been a couple instances of my no longer following someone on Twitter because of some plug in that tweet what they were listening to. Every three to four minutes a new tweet would pop up with the new song they were listening to. And, like a stereo turned way too loud at a party, it drowned out everyone else.
I’m almost at that point with some people who use TwitterFeed, a service I myself use that updates your Twitter feed every time you add a blog post. This is OK, except sometimes people blog a lot. And the same people I follow on Twitter I more than likely am following through my own RSS reader or on an aggregator somewhere. So instead of informing me of things, again I’m overwhelmed.
Twitter struck me as an odd application at first and then I started to get it as a way to fill in the gaps. This video really went a long way for that:
But now it’s so much more. Too much more. And at a certain point it’s going to turn people off.
People want more out of Twitter and they have third party applications which can provide it, but maybe Twitter really can’t handle such things. So sites like Plurk, which looks like a souped up Twitter that does everything a blog might do, are going to become appealing alternatives.But maybe this is people trying to turn Twitter into something it was created to be the alternative of: a blog.
My solution to that is to use Twitter to communicate with a very small group of people on very select topics. I’ve got a dozen friends on Twitter, and we all follow each other reciprocally. 75% of the discussion is pure tech geekery, because that’s what we’re all in the business of. The downside of this is that I’m forever declining requests to follow me on Twitter, which is socially awkward, but it does allow me to keep it useful, as a service.
And maybe that’s where it might lead, Twitter creating the option of making “groups” of friends a la Livejournal or other services where you can narrow down friends to certain groups, maybe even post tweets that are specific to that group.
Personally, I got into it to try and figure out the uses and many of the folks I follow are the same way, so maybe I get deluged with this stuff more than the average guy since every new thing is used by one or many of the folks I keep an eye on. Just the same, if this is the future of Twitter, it’s already run its course with me.
Check out Plurk: http://plurk.com/redeemByURL?from_uid=33537&check=2146416034&s=1
Plurk doesn’t appeal to me (at the moment, Twitter didn’t at first either…). It strikes me as an even busier Twitter and, well, microblogging. I like the “friends” aspect, but I can also get that with an RSS reader. I dunno. I’ll play with it, but I think that in addition to being Twittered out I’m almost Web 2.0/2.5/3.0′d out too. Not that that’s going to stop me from playing and figure it out, but I think we’re quickly reaching a critical point where there are more services than there are consumers to effectively use them in any fashion.
The circle is going to be closed, of course, when we get back to ringing each other up to discuss things.