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Friday, November 20, 2009

Almost Famous Update: Now-Out-of-Beta Brizzly Hires Facebooker and Translates Tweets

Drake Martinet

brizzly-logo

Brizzly, the Web-based Twitter client from Thing Labs, covered in Almost Famous two weeks ago, begins public beta today.

In addition to opening its “expanded” Twitter interface to the world at large, the start-up is offering an on-the-fly translation tool for foreign tweets. And it has hired former FriendFeeder and current Facebooker Ben Darnell.

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Monday, November 9, 2009

The Internet Is Killing Storytelling

Ben Macintyre

Click, tweet, e-mail, twitter, skim, browse, scan, blog, text: the jargon of the digital age describes how we now read, reflecting the way that the very act of reading, and the nature of literacy itself, is changing.

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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Trick or Tweet!

Here is the latest comic from our Joy of Tech friends at Geek Culture, Nitrozac and Snaggy. Joy of Tech appears three times a week in the Voices section of this site. (Click on the image to see a bigger version.)

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Friday, October 9, 2009

Short Outbursts on Twitter? #Big Problem

Laura M. Holson

Times are tough for the “tweet before you think” crowd.

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Viral Campaign Talks Tracy Morgan Into Twittering

Andrew LaVallee

See what the power of the Internet can do?

Tracy Morgan joined Twitter Thursday afternoon in response to a brief campaign designed to encourage the “30 Rock” star to share his off-color updates with fans.

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Friday, September 25, 2009

Tweet, Tweet, Ka-Ching: Twitter Is Changing the Way Nonprofits Make the Ask

Lydia Dishman

Can non-profits raise awareness, increase membership, and–most critically–“make the ask” successfully on Twitter? Can a 140-character message deliver the visceral wallop of, say, heart-wrenching footage of starving children covered in flies or the sad eyes of a neglected and abused animal?

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Thursday, August 27, 2009

A “Macroblogging” Service, Woofer, Launches as Twitter Homage

Alice Truong

Is 140 characters simply not your style?

Lucky for you, there’s a new site billed as the “anti-Twitter”: Woofer, a so-called macroblogging service with a 1,400-character minimum per post.

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Thursday, June 18, 2009

And We’ll Tweet at the End of the Tour

Paul Carr

I’m trying to imagine how it happened.

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Monday, April 20, 2009

Oprah, Ashton Kutcher Mark Twitter “Turning Point”

Brandon Griggs and John D. Sutter

As Ashton Kutcher becomes the first to collect 1 million followers on Twitter and Oprah Winfrey sends out her first tweet, tech observers are debating: Does Friday mark a new peak for the microblogging service? Or the beginning of its demise?

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Friday, February 27, 2009

President Obama Abandons Twitter

Paul Boutin

Barack Obama’s online presence drove his campaign’s early fund raising and his primary victory over Hillary Rodham Clinton. His campaign’s use of Twitter, Facebook and YouTube proved that he was part of the Web 2.0 generation. So what happened? President Obama hasn’t tweeted once since being sworn into office.

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Monday, November 10, 2008

Careful What You Say on Twitter–Delete Option Removed? (Updated)

Steve O' Hear

It appears that micro-blogging service Twitter has removed the option to delete a “tweet” once it’s been published, making the service a haven for digital litter–the trail of information about you or things you’ve said that perhaps you shouldn’t leave lying around the Web.

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This is a section of the All Things Digital Web site featuring posts from around the Web, from other Dow Jones properties and also original pieces we solicit. The section is now explicitly labeled that it comes "from other Web sites."

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