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19
Mar '09

Twitter is for smaller things

Rog posted in

Several people have tried to tell me that Twitter is an important social tool.

I see people trying to apply important communication via Twitter, but in most applications I see more compromise than improvement.

Recently, someone I know tried to use it for something rather serious: Alerting friends and family to a health emergency. Some unfortunately predictable things happened:

  1. The people connected to Twitter feeds have become so accustomed to the low signal-to-noise ratio that some either missed the more important message, or they didn't read it until skimming messages much later. Twitter has become so much for junk, pointless messages, there's a sort of crying wolf paradigm.
  2. The people not connected to the Twitter feed were left out of the loop. There was an expectation that someone would inform them, but it got muddled in the question each asked themselves "who's read it already and who hasn't?". In a culture of politeness, nobody wanted to double-inform anyone. Even in the most dire of situations, social communication becomes victim to its own social rules.
  3. The people addicted to reading short trivial messages were oddly pleased that something important was sent this way. Regardless of tact or good taste, they determined that the problem was everyone else for not being better in tune with their beloved Twitter.

Eventually everyone was informed and the emergency subsided.

I'll be really nice and say Twitter is good for broadcasting short messages with convenience. Messages in feeds are brief and can be read at leisure via a variety of services and devices. I wouldn't use it for anything important, because by its nature it tends to lack direct feedback. Oh sure, you can Tweet right back, but generally nobody broadcasts simple feedback as we would vocalize in person, on a phone call, typed in an email or even an IM. Oddly, it's the way it's used socially that leaves out much of the feedback, because full conversations are generally not what Twitter is about.

I'm over-explaining it really. Twitter just isn't personal communication. It's publicly broadcasting realtime events. Trying to use it for anything else is like shoving a square peg into a round hole, it tends to cut the corners off.

I'd call it a fun social toy, with a few select situations where it could be used seriously but there are probably better choices if what you're saying requires any sort of action or promptness.

The other side issue is that social tools depend too much on total and complete adoption. And then once that's happened? We're putting a lot of trust into a single privately operated service. 80% adoption isn't good enough, but 90%+ becomes scary.

I hate to admit this, geek that I am, but sometimes technology doesn't solve everything.

(1:24 pm)

Comment by Doyce (not verified)
Mar 19, 2009 2:27pm

I disagree with the assessment that Twitter is for literal communication (some kind of IM replacement), or broadcasting realtime events. I can be used for both, but that's secondary to it's most successful application, which is sharing thoughts and, via that function, building connections with other people.

"I'm having tacos at lunch today." Banal, boring, and not helpful in terms of building a connection with anyone.
"Man, I love pico de gallo. Cilantro wakes up my brain." Same instigating event, but something much more personable. Agree or not, you know that person better.

"Watching the hockey game," is not nearly as interesting (or funny) as a Tweet that simply reads "Fucking KINGS!"

So, my opinion: it's a tool for connection (as opposed to communication), and for conveying thoughts (more than events).

Telepathy, pure and simple (to quote Stephen King).

Comment by Rog
Mar 19, 2009 4:03pm

I think you've nailed it there Doyce by saying it's a tool for connection. I hadn't thought of it so much in that way, but it's true.

The unfortunate event I described has turned me negative on Twitter. I think however, I don't really have much of a need for more social connections at the moment. So while I've been able to intellectually understand it, I don't share any love for it because it's not fulfilling anything for me personally.

I suppose that's part of why it's so frustrating that some people love Twitter so much and they're hellbent on proving that it's something everyone should use all the time. To me, it's just another social tool among many. We seem almost swarmed by them lately.

Comment by Claque (not verified)
Mar 20, 2009 2:46pm

It's good for some things, but Twitter enables too many socially inept people. Communication that avoids direct contact fits them too well, suddenly they have lots to say and much of it is mindless drivel. Not too different from blogging. :P

Comment by Rog
Mar 20, 2009 3:06pm

@Claque: That last sentence fits, it's just exactly as described: microblogging.

There's no magic, no revolution, that's all it is. It wouldn't even be worth much comment if some of the overzealous fans weren't pumping it as something it isn't.

And yeah, I'll accept that criticism as a blogger. I think there's been way too much ballyhoo about blogging too. It's not the revolution some make it out to be either and it too is older than the catchphrases for it. 50% of it is drivel, 40% is derivative and the other 10% is way too proud of itself.

Comment by ixobelle (not verified)
Mar 23, 2009 9:00pm

the noun twitter is based on the latin root of "TWIT" meaning someone of little to no significance.

"TWEET" is a verb that is simply a shortened spelling of that annoying yellow canary that Sylvester the Cat was never quite able to silence.

I could go on and on about Facebook, Myspace, or whatever else the internet at large is choking on at the moment, but i really just don't care.

i think it's summed up pretty elegantly here:

http://www.overcompensating.com/posts/20080903.html

Comment by Tony (not verified)
Mar 26, 2009 1:04pm

I hear about twitter every day at work, since we're involved with stuff like that. I absolutely hate it.