Posts tagged: Twitter

Jan 22 2010

My Simple Twitter Program

One thing that’s kept me from diving into the social networking systems like Twitter and Facebook is their ephemeral nature.  Twitter saves posts for maybe two weeks, and that time frame is getting shorter as the service gets busier.  I don’t know how long Facebook saves things, but I don’t think there’s any easy way to search back through them anyway. Read more »

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Mar 11 2009

This ‘n’ That

photo from flickr.com

photo from flickr.com

Wow, I’m glad we didn’t plant a bunch of seeds over the weekend.  They might have floated right out of the garden beds, and anything that germinated might die tonight.  I hope our little garlics survive this cold snap.

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Feb 26 2009

Almost Back to Normal

Wow, I don’t blog for three days, and my traffic climbs each day!  I’m not sure it’s a good sign if your blog is at its most popular when you’re not writing.

Anyway, the big project that’s been keeping me from daily blogging is almost complete; I can see the light at the end of the tunnel now.  It should go live Monday and need a few fixes that are bound to come up right at first, and then I’ll be able to breath again by the end of the week.  First thing I’m going to do is sleep two days straight.  Then I’ll be able get back to things I’ve been neglecting, like this blog.

I forgot to write about the St. Rose chili dinner last Sunday.  It went really well from what I heard; we nearly ran out of food this time.  It’s too bad all the late Masses in town seem to get out about the same time; we get a big crowd right about 12:15 and then it dies down pretty quickly.  Maybe a discount for early birds?  Hmm, have to suggest that.  I didn’t win the raffle again.  I’ve got some other church stuff floating around in my head to write about some time, but I’ll save that for another time.

I haven’t been paying much attention to Twitter lately either.  I was about ready to just drop it (again), when I ran across this post which says what so many people say about Twitter:

At first I ignored Twitter as just another vanilla social media app. Then I looked into it and just didn’t get it. Finally I signed up and started playing around, but was less than impressed (I followed all the wrong people and felt like I was opting-in to be SPAMmed). But then 2 weeks ago I had an eye-opening experience and came face-to-face with the full value of Twitter, and then just last week I met with Jack Dorsey and became a fullblown Twitter convert.

It seems like that’s always how it works:  Net-savvy person looks at Twitter, thinks it looks kind of silly.  He tries it out, decides he was right the first time: it’s silly.  Then something clicks and suddenly he’s got a thousand followers and thinks it’s the best thing since someone put bacon on a cheeseburger.

So, I’m sticking with it for now, although I haven’t had the time to play with it much.  I did look at a couple of those tools that help you to find people with the same interests or who are in your area, and followed some new people.  Some of them followed me back, and some new ones did too, so I’ve got about 40-50 each way now.  Thing is, it seems like every time you follow a few people, it sends an alert out to all the Internet Marketing people: the ones whose sole activity on Twitter seems to be getting to 10,000 followers and telling everyone else how.  There’s a real pyramid scheme feel to it, in a way.  I suppose those guys will move along when I don’t follow them back right away, and I’ll be left with the ones who might actually be interested in what I say.

It seems like all these internet marketing methods come back to one thing: The List.  No matter what technology and methods you’re using to do it, the goal is to develop a List of people who trust your opinion.  It’s like any real-life sales in that sense, which is probably why I don’t really care for it: next to being a clown, I can’t imagine many things I’d less like to be than a salesman.  But a good salesman’s List is worth gold after a while.  Online, it seems to be the same way.  If you’re a blogger, your List is the people who subscribe to your blog.  If you’re a Twitterer, it’s your followers.  If you collect email addresses in exchange for a free report or something, that’s the List.  On social networking sites, it might be your friends.  There’s really nothing new here except the tools.

But however your List is created, its value doesn’t just come from its length, but also from how much those people trust you.  If I follow 100 people every day on Twitter, it appears that at least half of them will follow me back automatically, so after a month I’ll have 1500 followers.  But will any of these people who have no idea who I am care what I have to say?  If I post a link and say, “Buy this cool product,” no more of them are likely to do so than if I’d sent it to 1500 random people.  I still have to spend time writing content, linking to cool stuff, and developing a personality, before any of them are going to take my opinions seriously.  So even though it might be a tool for growing a long List in a hurry, it still takes plenty of grunt work before the quality is there.

Something to work on in the future, I guess.  In the meantime, there are sites to work on and garden seeds to order.

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Feb 17 2009

Always Catching Up

Cards

Cards

I’m really falling down on my blogging duties lately—darn work anyway.  Why can’t I have 10,000 visitors a day, so I could just spend the day writing and playing bridge?  Ah well, someday. Read more »

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Feb 06 2009

Latin Lesson 8 Posted – and More

Latin Lesson 8 is posted, covering the use of the dative case for indirect objects, and adjectives ending in -er.  When I get time, I think I’m going to start doing podcasts to go with the lessons, so I can explain things a bit more and give more examples.

Photo from Flickr.com

Photo from Flickr.com

It’s 65 degrees out today—very hard to stay sitting here working and not go wandering outside to start planning the garden or just sit outside in the sun.  Can’t wait for spring.

There was no blog post last night because I ended up doing some unexpected system triage.  I upgraded some software, and that upgraded a low-level library which a whole bunch of other programs depended on, so I ended up needing to rebuild a whole bunch of stuff.  As long as I was at it, I thought I’d go ahead and upgrade FreeBSD from 7.0 to 7.1.  That went fine, but when it booted, it froze when it tried to bring up the onboard network card (which 7.0 had happily ignored because it didn’t support it).  Turning the card off in the BIOS got things back to normal so I could continue on with my upgrades.  (Like I need gigabit speed on my home network anyway.)  So instead of a quick blog post and an early bedtime I was up late getting all that done, but it’s all shiny and new now. Read more »

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Jan 19 2009

Monday Afternoon Roundup

Since today’s a government holiday, I can’t go to the library, and neither the package I’m anxiously awaiting nor any Netflix discs will be arriving today, so I guess I might as well work and blog.  Life is rough.

St. Rose is having a soup and sandwich lunch this coming Sunday, the 25th, from 11:00-4:00.  It’s on the St. Rose web site, but I still get St. Rose searchers here because of my articles about it, so I thought I’d announce it too.  The meal is $6/person or $25/family, and includes chicken noodle soup, ham and bean soup, cream turkey sandwiches (whatever that is), and coffee and ice tea.  There will also be two raffles: a 50-50; and one for an overnight stay at Stoney Creek Inn plus a gift basket.  Tell all your friends!

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Jan 15 2009

I Miss the Olden Days

Believe it or not, the Internet used to be fairly organized.  If you wanted to exchange or download files, you did it on FTP servers.  Text documents and small bits of information were on the web, or before that, on gopher.  Long-term, BBS-style discussions were on Usenet, which was organized into a simple hierarchy of groups, so everyone on the net who wanted to discuss Cardinal baseball subscribed to alt.sports.baseball.stl-cardinals. For real-time discussion you went to IRC, which had a channel for each topic. Everything had its place.

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Jan 14 2009

This and That

Yesterday’s post kind of drained my writing energy, so to paraphrase Mike and the Bots, today’s entry will be an anthology of short, plotless posts.

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