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Some Friday fun!
I maintain that the purpose of twitter is not to develop a microbrand, it's simply to tell folks what's up with me at any given time. If someone decides that is no longer interesting, they are welcome to unfollow.
To be honest, Doug, I enjoy hearing about Ben and Hannah much more than ICT in education. You're a husband and father before your job, why should twitter limited to one side of you?
And I think one of the reasons to use @ replies as opposed to dm's is to keep the conversation going and allow others to follow it. DM'ing takes it out of the public eye.
My thoughts, just off the cuff.
Chris
Thanks for your comment and your interest in my family! :-) Although I do standard 'status updates' about what I'm up to, that's in the way of context, really. For me, the important stuff on Twitter is the professional connections I make and links to useful stuff I find.
Of *course* I'm interested in the unfolding tapestry of other people's lives. Just sometimes I feel like there's a bit too much context, not enough content... ;-)
I maintain that you're purposing Twitter in a way it was not intended. Sure, you can make professional connections via Twitter, your blog, or Skype or whatever. The difference is Skype is designed to connect folks, a blog is what you make of it.
Inherently, however, Twitter is designed to provide updates that may or may not have context at all. You're building a set of community mores that may or may not be valid. It's a faulty construct because you're basing your norms on your idea of what the tool is to be used for.
I just wonder if we don't ask too much of Twitter.
With that said, I'll let this one go, there's too much passion around Twitter to incite a riot. Maybe then everyone would unfollow me! ;)
Chris
I don't usually like to compare schools to businesses. I prefer the 'charity' model better. :-)
influencing others, then it's important who follows us. It's also
important that we 'hang on' to them. At least, to my mind... :-)
influencing others, then it's important who follows us. It's also
important that we 'hang on' to them. At least, to my mind... :-)
One thing I'd add is not to take being un-followed personally. People un-follow for all sorts of reasons. Sometimes people just scale back their fellowship for better management. Othertimes, some tweets just aren't in your area of interest.
If you decide to use a service like Qwitter, don't use it for vanity purposes. It may help you give you feedback about the effects of your tweeting, but don't take it too seriously.
Twitter's a remarkable permission-based way to connect with other people, develop a human-based RSS reader or just have fun. People follow and un-follow all the time. If you use Twitter intelligently and with a good purpose, the number of followers doesn't matter.