Dedicated to my late brave, beautiful and silly mummy, Debra Ross. I love you mumster.

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When people lose interest in you, use Qwitter

Screenshot of the Qwitter home page

For those who don’t use Twitter, the online microblog and simple social networking site, whenever someone starts following your messages because they think you’re interesting, you receive an email from Twitter letting you know. Checking who my new followers are has become an unexpectedly happy part of my generally dull morning routine.

Despite my love for Twitter, one feature has been missing the entire time: a notification when a person breaks off and stops following you; arguably I think these notifications would be even more interesting to watch simply so that I could establish my own "revulsion" rate as it were!

Enter Qwitter. Once you’ve signed up to their service they notify you whenever a person loses interest in you and stops following your messages.

For example, since signing up I’ve been notified that Marian Call and Shaun Martin have stopped following me. I’m still following you guys if you change your minds… :-(

2008.10.22 UPDATE: Jotoole4 is no longer following me on Twitter either.

Registering for Brightkite fun, just a slight mistake

Brightkite is a relatively new social networking tool that allows you to specify your geographic location, have that information sent to your Twitter account, and to be told if anyone you know is close by. I’m having lots of fun :-).

ASIDE: Brightkite works as a for of voluntary big brotherism, it allows the FBI, ASIO and other security organisations to keep tabs on exactly where you are.

Of course, the adage of garbage in, garbage out still applies, so you could just as easily say you’re in a beautiful town in Croatia when actually you’re in Suntec City in Singapore. The possibilities are as infinite as my distaste for Windows Vista and bubblegum flavoured toothpaste!

The web version works by you specifying a particular address, building, suburb, city etc and choosing to "Check in". Upon checking into a location, you can view a Google map and satellite pictures of the area and share your profile with other people. For example, Currently I’m checked into Robinson Street, Mawson Lakes in Adelaide.

You can try out the Guess My Location feature too which, as the name surprisingly suggests, attempts to guess your location. I tried it this evening and was told I was in Toowoomba, Queensland.

For those of you who don’t live in Australia, here’s a map from my iPhone showing the scale of the error!

What I’m really interested in is using Brightkite as a way to document a holiday or trip. By checking into places using your phone (which is also trivially easy to set up), you can post exactly where you are at different times and days, so later when you return home you can create a map you can share with people of exactly where you went and for how long you stayed at places. Mix these maps with photos, videos and notes you take at each check-in point and the possibilities are very exiting. I’m looking forward to using it in that capacity on my next trip!

You can follow me at http://brightkite.com/people/rubenerd. If you don’t have an account you can’t register unless you have an invite, if you want one post a comment below and I’ll give you one of mine, I have a few spare.

Eeirily accurate web comics are eeiry

Sometimes a person such as Mike Sullivan comes along from a service such as Twitter and shows you something like a comic that is able to capture a recent experience you’ve had so accurately, it’s not only creepy but makes you want to take a pellet gun outside your new house and walk around the neighbourhood looking for people with telescopes that are looking on your every move!

This comic was from XKCD, a web comic of romance, sarcasm maths and language, mirrored here so I wouldn’t be wasting their bandwidth.

XKCD rocks!

For those who haven’t read about my fun with telecom and internet companies since I moved temporarily back to Adelaide a few weeks ago for studies, these posts in chronological order tell the whole terrifying aggravating story. Replace the word terrifying with agitating. Or irritating, or some other word that has something to do with grilled cheese sandwiches. I don’t like people who don’t like station wagons, sure they look a bit silly, but they’re practical!

I’ve changed Twitter clients, again

I’ve been on Twitter since March 2007, and things sure have evolved from those days… check out the picture of Twitterrific 1.0 on the right from early 2007!

During that time I’ve changed Twitter clients 7 times:

Twitterrific
Fantastic little Aqua Mac OS X native application that was originally free (as in price), but in a controversial move they started forcing inline advertisements on users and wouldn’t remove them unless you paid a registration fee. That move put me off using it.
Snitter
Snook’s Twitter, an Adobe Air client that was small and could have it’s themes changed. Seemed to crash all the time though: in hindsight it was probably caused by Air and not his client itself, but at the time I gave up and moved on
TwitBin
A Twitter client sidebar for Mozilla Firefox that I used on my FreeBSD desktop machine before I realised that you’re only allowed to make a certain number of requests to the Twitter servers per hour. Figured it made sense just to use a client on my MacBook Pro.
Twhirl
Another Adobe Air client that felt like Snitter on steroids (a particularly apt comparison given the current athletic competition going on). Acted more like an aggregator than just a Tweet downloader; you could choose to read direct messages, replies, and apply filters.
TTYtter
A very customizable and powerful Unix command line Twitter client written in Perl. I still have it installed on my FreeBSD desktop when I want to use Twitter remotely, though I moved on to the client below for when I want to keep logs and for day-to-day use
Twitter Commandline
A much simpler and more lightweight Unix command line Twitter client that can post messages, read friends timelines and send direct messages. Also written in Perl which is nice because I can read and modify it.

For my primary Twittering needs though, I’ve moved over to a very sleek client called TweetDeck. From their site description:

TweetDeck is an Adobe Air desktop application that is currently in public beta. It aims to evolve the existing functionality of Twitter by taking an abundance of information i.e twitter feeds, and breaking it down into more manageable bite sized pieces.

TweetDeck enables users to split their main feed (All Tweets) into topic or group specific columns allowing a broader overview of tweets. To do this All Tweets are saved to a local database. The far left column will always contain All Tweets. The GROUP, SEARCH and REPLIES buttons then allow the user to make up additional columns populated from the database. Once created these additional columns will automatically update allowing the user to keep track of a twitter threads far easier.

Unlike all the other graphical Twitter clients I’ve used, it splits up your screen into multiple columns so you can see your timeline, replies and direct messages right next to each other. It also has a very nice buzz column for the latest words and topics being discussed, and a search column you can customise. All the columns can be rearranged to your taste, and if you prefer the window can be "collapsed" into one column like a more traditional client.

TweetDeck running on my MacBook Pro

Given it takes up your entire screen it works fantastically on widescreens such as the display on a MacBook Pro. I assigned it to it’s own space in Mac OS X Leopard so whenever I want to check all my Twittery goodness I just navigate to that virtual desktop. Notification messages appear regardless of whatever virtual desktop or space you’re in at the time, which is very useful.

ASIDE: I also love the dark background with light text colour scheme because it’s so much easier on the eyes, especially late at night when my eyes are tired. I think people who use dark backgrounds with light text are very intelligent, smart and bright people who I’m sure are also incredibly attractive, desirable and humble as well.

My only gripes are: the font is a tad big, meaning vertically it shows less tweets per column than Snitter, Twitterrific or Twhirl, the icon tends to hide itself on the Dock when my desktop background is dark as well, and it doesn’t respond to mouse gesteres on Macs, though the latter problem is surely a limitation with Air than the application itself.

I’ve well and truly given up on instant messaging clients. Who needs them when you have this good stuff? Reliability aside of course:

Classic Twitter is down message
Classic Twitter-is-down message from Christmas 2007

Back in KL again

Suria KLCC shopping centre at the base of the Petronas Twin Towers in KL, Malaysia

Salamat datang ke Rubenerd Blog p1181!

Well here I am back in KL again typing away in at the Starbucks in KLCC. Don’t let my archival Flickr photo above fool you though, it’s been raining the whole time I’ve been here! In the tropics a light shower is a good thing though in my opinion, the clouds block some of the sunlight and make the temperature a bit cooler, especially in the evening after a day of rain.

I’ve met up with a friend of mine for some semi-official business regarding semi-official business and it went surprisingly well, we’ve hammered out some plans. With all the talk about email, then instant messaging, then blog comments, then micro blogging on services such as Twitter, it’s still so much simpler and faster organising things in person. I always cringe whenever my dad says that the internet is amazing because you could work literally anywhere on Earth now and do a job through it; while I’m sure it’s possible and I know lots of people who do work like that, I couldn’t imagine giving up on human to human contact for 100% of a business. It would be downright maddening!

I’m here with my sister and we’ll be back in Singapore late this week.

Using Twhirl with Jaiku

I’ve been direct messaged on Twitter a few times by people wanting to know how to set up Twhirl to send tweets to Jaiku properly. They’ve already got Pownce set up just fine with their username and password, but their messages aren’t getting through to Jaiku.

The problem is, unlike the Pownce password field, Jaiku needs your API key, not your password. To find out what your API key is, login to Jaiku and click the API link at the bottom of the page. The page that appears will have your API key.

Enter your Jaiku username and the API key into the two text boxes in Twhirl, then enjoy having your tweets appearing on more than one site! This means you can keep in touch with people on three separate services, plus it makes you look like you’re putting even more effort into your Web 8.0 life, or whatever version the 1337 media people have decided to assign to the intertubes now.

These are my profiles if you’re interested on Twitter, Jaiku and Pownce.

A philosophical Twitter question

In a similar vein to my last useless philosophical question, consider this scenario! Imagine you’ve configured your weblog software to republish all your Tweets into daily weblog posts. Then imagine you’ve set up TwitterFeed to watch your weblog and update your Twitter profile with each new weblog post.

Would you be publishing the same information to Twitter and your weblog every day for eternity?

Why do you use Twitter?

Twitter

I noticed this morning on the side of Twitter profiles a question hyperlink had sprouted. Clicking it took me to a form where the Twitter folks asked "Why do you use Twitter?" along with the promise of a Jeep Wrangler if I answered. I’d heard similar promises before, but I figured I’d give it a shot:

What don’t I use it for? I use it as a replacement for SMS on my phone using m.twitter.com, as a replacement for a blog aggregator for urgent news where time is critical, to meet and talk with people near me, to meet and talk with people on the other side of the planet from me, to get questions on any topic imaginable answered in a flash by all kinds of people, to keep up to date with big names in tech, to post humerous signs I’ve just read, to let people know when I’ve created a new weblog entry, to let people know when I’ve updated my podcast, to clean the glass in my windows, to use as a replacement for salad dressing…

Oh, and and to let people know what I’m doing in 140 characters or less.

It’s a shame, I’m learning how to ride a motor scooter not a car right now. I guess I could sell it and buy lots and lots of computer equipment. Like a rack full of Xserves.