As long as I’ve been on Twitter (I started in March 2007) people have been complaining about Twitter. But recently things have changed. The complaints have increased in frequency and intensity, and now are coming more often from especially thoughtful and constructive users of the platform. There is an air of defeat about these complaints now, an almost palpable giving-up. For many of the really smart people on Twitter, it’s over. Not in the sense that they’ll quit using it altogether; but some of what was best about Twitter — primarily the experience of discovery — is now pretty clearly a thing of the past.


user-inactivated:

I don't agree with this, just because twitter can be filtered in the same way Hubski can. It's about following people.

That being said, my current problem with twitter is that, though it's a mobile platform, I only use twitter when I'm not doing things. I don't tweet as things are happening because I'm too busy experiencing them. Then I forget to tweet about them afterwards.

But I do agree with the fact that if you go to Twitter for serious discussion, you're in for a bad time. 140 characters does not for any sort of in-depth conversation make.


posted 3521 days ago