Posts Tagged ‘twitter’

Search and filter tweets using Friendfeed advanced search

October 1st, 2009

Friendfeed aggregates and stores all the activity that is fed into the system. Most FF users bring in their Twitter feed, in effect storing all their tweets. It works a little bit like Google Reader, once it’s there, it will always be there, even if the original is deleted.

The advanced search features of Friendfeed makes it a pretty good twitter search alternative. It even supports real-time, so you can make your own twitter news monitors.

I wrote this for the Online Journalism Blog, read the rest there.

Quickly share stuff from Google Reader on Twitter without using Twitterfeed

July 27th, 2009

Twitterfeed is great but it’s not perfect, it’s not real-time. You can use Friendfeed to bring in your Google Readers’ shared item and republish them to Twitter.

Friendfeed let’s you publish everything, or a few selected services to Twitter. If you have a lot of stuff going into your Friendfeed stream, you might not want to share everything on Twitter.

» Read more: Quickly share stuff from Google Reader on Twitter without using Twitterfeed

Friendfeed and Twitter are different, but how exactly?

May 4th, 2009

ff-twitterI have been posting some ideas and thoughts about Twitter and friendfeed on both of their services. Mostly questioning how they compare or differentiate. I believe they contemplate each other in one way or the other, but haven’t really figured out how they fit together just yet.

It seems like hardcore twitter users are mostly trying to compare the two services, and friendfeed users take pride in separating the two.

» Read more: Friendfeed and Twitter are different, but how exactly?

How I’m going to get more followers/subscribers on Friendfeed

April 29th, 2009

I have never really used Friendfeed in any really engaging way. The conversational aspects of the service is fantastic, but I haven’t really been able to unlock the full potential of it. Until now I have been using Friendfeed mostly as an aggregator for my own content, only to redistribute it using the Facebook widget and the ‘post to twitter’ option. I also used it to remind myself which social networks I’m signed up to, Friendfeed gives me a nice list.

Kasper's Friendfeed subscriber

» Read more: How I’m going to get more followers/subscribers on Friendfeed

Sideline gives you advanced twitter search, but that’s about it!

April 1st, 2009

Just stumbled across Yahoo’s new twitter client called Sideline. At first it seems like it offers nothing over TweetDeck or Thwirl, but one thing that caught my eye was the advanced search capabilities.

Sideline from Yahoo gives you advanced Twitter search in desktop client

You can have multiple tabs open with several advanced searches going on. This seems like an improvement over something like Twitterfall, which is browser based, and doesn’t have the same advanced search functions.

Here are Yahoo’s goals for the app:

  • Create a desktop application that allows for the creation, grouping, and auto-execution of advanced search queries against Twitter
  • Leverage existing skill-sets and tools
  • Target the Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux operating systems and minimize the amount of platform specific code that must be written
  • Open source the code so that others can learn from, contribute to, and/or extend the product as they see fit

But to be fair, it does also seem like the ONLY advantage is the advanced search. Sideline offers very little in terms of interaction, you can’t reply or DM anyone, you can’t even log in. You can mark tweets as favourites, but as you are not logged in, these will only be saved locally and won’t be viewable in your Twitter favourites.

Except for being a desktop client and featuring tabs, it doesn’t offer much more than the official twitter search. It only updates every minute, you can set this to be less frequent. But you can’t have it update every two seconds or so, meaning if you monitor popular search terms, you will be bombareded with 100’s of results to go through every minute.

Hopefully Yahoo will improve this Twitter client in the future to include some of the features that you have in TweetDeck and Twitterfall, but at the moment it doesn’t seem very usefull. I will stick to Twiterfall for my Twitter searches. But as mentioned on mashable:

Sideline seems to be more of a research project for Yahoo rather than building a new major new product or division.

There hasn’t been many reactions as of yet in the blogosphere, but there has been a few on Twitter:

mahadewa@avianto That’s cool :) re:sideline from TweetDeck in reply to avianto

alicam: Not sure if we need another Twitter search app but it works nicely – http://sideline.yahoo.com/ from TweetDeck

frumpa: trying out Yahoo’s Sideline but the links are NOT active hyperlinks http://sideline.yahoo.com from TweetDeck

e_D_D_y: Is Yahoo! SideLine an April Fools joke ? Can’t get any result, it’s just… empty :( from DestroyTwitter