I noticed two things about Twitter tonight. First, as part of the new site redesign there’s a new 404 (page not found) error message. It includes a search box – so if you guessed someone’s twitter name and got it wrong, you can search from them right there on that page! Brilliant. Sometimes it’s the little things.

The other thought I just had about Twitter was that it sure is nice when people post personal messages. I know a lot of people complain about mundane “what I’m eating for lunch” posts, but these really are status messages and are sometimes useful as such. I was just pinging my friend Beth Kanter on Skype and after she didn’t respond, I checked out her Twitter profile. (After I got her username wrong again, that is.) There I learned that today is Beth’s 23rd wedding anniversary! Congratulations, Beth and Husband. Thus I know not to expect a response from Beth tonight. Good old Twitter, doing its job as a way to share status messages. Keep those updates about your personal lives coming, Twitter friends!
30 People to Follow Regarding the Real Time Web – Who Else Should Be On This List?
I’m working on a list of Twitter users working on Real Time Web matters and realized once I hit 30 that I ought to just ask readers and friends for suggestions.
Here’s my list so far all in one place and easy to follow in one fell swoop thanks to the wonderful new service Tweepml. Please add more names of people who should be included in this list below in comments and everyone will thank you for it.
One RSS Feed Everyone Should Subscribe To: Who Favorites Your Tweets
Favstar.fm is a cool service that tracks who’s favoriting your tweets. It’s the easiest way to find out, as far as I can tell. Tonight they added RSS feeds, so you can subscribe to see who likes what you’re saying but didn’t retweet or reply to it. It’s so simple and so useful that I think everyone should subscribe to that feed. I wrote about it tonight on ReadWriteWeb.
Real Time Web Research: What Companies or People Should I Request Briefings From?
I’m working on a couple of big research projects for ReadWriteWeb concerning The Real Time Web. I am looking for key articles to read on the topic (suggestions welcome) but I’m also interested in suggestions (or volunteers) of organizations or individuals I can request briefings from.
I’m interested in the use of real time, web-based information not just in consumer web companies, but also in nonprofit organizations, financial services and in media. I probably have the least resources available in media and financial services. If you can recommend any people doing exciting work with the real time web in any of those sectors or believe you’d be good to talk to yourself – please shoot me an email or leave a comment below. My email is marshall@marshallk.com.
I’m excited to try and do a lot of briefings on this topic and learn a frightening amount about it. Thanks for your help with that.
Interaction Hottest in First Hour After Writing? Not For These Augmented Reality Posts
Image 1: Traffic for Augmented Reality: 5 Barriers to a Web That’s Everywhere
Image 2: Traffic for First iPhone Augmented Reality App Appears Live in App Store
They say that interaction with articles is hottest in the first hour after you post them. I’ve always thought there was some truth to that, but some of the articles I’ve been writing about Augmented Reality lately make me think that might not be as important as I thought. (Check out this post by Sid Gabriel Hubbard explaining what AR is.)
That’s probably because they are being bandied about in social networks until they happen to hit a certain threshold of having been shared, then they go to place with higher profile and more traffic. (Front page, most popular, etc.) I imagine that posts not crossing that threshold exhibit a more traditional pattern of traffic.
It also makes me think Augmented Reality is something people want more coverage of. That’s good because I want to write more about it. I do need to post a poll asking if people think this stuff is stupid or for real, though. Definitely seeing some comments saying it’s all hype, the apps so far are dumb, etc.
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- Augmented reality startups petition Apple for live video interface (digital.venturebeat.com)
If You Think RSS is Dead Then That’s Your Loss and It’s a Big One
Sam Diaz at ZDNet tonight wrote the latest admission that he’s not using his RSS reader anymore. I have a lot of respect for Sam’s writing, but I am having a hard time believing that he and so many others say they no longer even bother to read feeds. Twitter, Facebook and aggregators like Techmeme or Google News suffice for Sam, he says. He’s far from alone.
They sure don’t suffice for me. I do get a whole lot of story leads, perspective and more from Twitter (something I wrote about in an article titled Twitter is Paying My Rent) but RSS is no less important for me today than it used to be.
I’m hesitant to write about my own research methods, to be honest, because if my competitors want to abandon RSS that’s just fine with me! But for other readers here, I will say that social media like Twitter has only added to my inflow – not replaced feeds at all.
I will tell you that I no longer use Google Reader or Netvibes. Instead, I use open source software on our own servers that is more customizable, more reliable and more efficient.
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I got a scoop!
Not living in Silicon Valley, not focusing on business as much as tech, spending half my time on administrative work and being a little more soft-headed than other tech reporters means I don’t get big fat scoops very often. Yesterday I did and it was pretty awesome. I heard word that Netscape founder Marc Andreessen was backing a new browser, based on Facebook, so I did some digging around and then published this post: RockMelt: Netscape’s Andreessen Backing Stealth Facebook Browser.
Thankfully I got a screenshot and not just news. Because of that even some people who didn’t want to link to me in subsequent coverage did.
The moral of the story is that people should tip me off to hot stuff more often. I think I did a good job covering this one (though I should have reached out to two people rumored to be involved as one has since denied it) and will do a good job covering your tips too. Send ’em to marshall@readwriteweb.com or hit me up by IM. General tips can be sent to the whole staff at tips@readwriteweb.com but the juicy secret ones can come right here. Thanks.


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