Twitter for Dummies (11 page)

Read Twitter for Dummies Online

Authors: Laura Fitton,Michael Gruen,Leslie Poston

Tags: #Internet, #Computers, #Web Page Design, #General

BOOK: Twitter for Dummies
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3. Type a message in the Send a Direct Message box.

4. Click Send to send the message.

You can send DMs from any regular Twitter input source — text messages, third-party apps, or the main Twitter interface — by entering
d [username]
and then typing your tweet. For example, if you want to send a direct message to our Dummies account (
@dummies
) to ask when the next edition of
Twitter For Dummies
is coming out, you format the DM as
d dummies When’s the next edition coming out?

Sending DMs is easy. But proceed with caution! Many Twitter users have embarrassing tales of DMs that they accidentally sent as public tweets because they formatted the tweet incorrectly or sent it from the Twitter Home screen instead of from the user’s Profile page (best bet) or the Direct Messages page. Double-check, just to be sure.

Playing (Twitter) Favorites

One of the icons that appears when you hover your mouse over a particular tweet is the Favorites star. It’s basically Twitter’s equivalent of a bookmarking tool, and twitterers often overlook it. When you mark a tweet as a favorite, it appears on your Favorites page (see Figure 3-4). You may want to mark a tweet as a favorite to:

Save it for later.

Acknowledge that it helped you or that you found it amusing.

Mark it so that you can reply to it later.

Remember it so that you can reference it in a blog post or article.

Save it to quote later.

Figure 3-4:
Your favorite tweets are stored forever.

Ari Herzog
(@ariherzog
) pointed out that favorites are an untapped opportunity to collect testimonials and other tweets that might have value for your company. Innovation software company Brightidea (
@brightidea
) uses it to curate a great collection of Tweets about innovation, drawing upon Twitter search results for keywords related to innovation.

Our point is, don’t limit yourself to using Favorites only as literal favorites. Use Favorites whichever way works best for you!

If you start using the Favorites icon on a regular basis, you’ll soon have a large collection of tweets that you can gather data from for various projects or reference when you need to remember a particular joke or comment. You can also use it for bookmarking links so that you can visit it later — many of your best links and referrals will come from your fellow Twitter users.

One way to find more people on Twitter is to visit the Profile pages of your friends on Twitter and look at
their
Favorites, to see which tweets they liked the most. If your best friend marked a particular tweet as a favorite, and you’re not yet following the person who posted that tweet, you may want to start following that person.

Searching favorite tweets

At the time we write this book, Twitter doesn’t yet offer a way to search within your list of favorite tweets and hasn’t announced any plans to do so. While your list grows, you may want to find some way to catalog your tweets. Some people use a spreadsheet in a desktop program such as Microsoft Excel or a Web-based one such as Google Docs. Some keep a record of their favorite tweets’ permalinks (permanent link URL) pages and tag them by topic, using bookmarking services such as Delicious (
www.delicious.com
) or Diigo (
www.diigo.com
).

Indexing your favorite tweets takes a bit of hacking:

1. To get to a tweet’s permalink, find the tweet in your Twitter stream and click the small link below it that shows the time the tweet was sent.

That link loads the tweet on its very own page, which you can bookmark for later because that page has a standard Web URL that always leads to that specific tweet.

2. Add that URL to your favorite bookmarking service.

Follow the directions that your bookmarking service offers for how to add a URL.

3. If the option is available, tag the link so that you can search by topic later to find it again.

After you have a system in place for keeping track of tweets that you want to save by using the favorite feature, you can then find them whenever you need them. You can also use the third-party application Tweecious (see Chapter 14) by tweeting the permalink to your favorite tweets and including the word favorites in the tweet where you do so.

Becoming a Renaissance Man via the Everyone Tab (RIP)

The Everyone tab used to lead to Twitter’s Public Timeline, which contained all tweets from all twitterers everywhere. It’s no big surprise that the Public Timeline was always pretty crowded and random, and that it became ever more so during the meteoric growth leading up to our publication deadline.

As we go to press, you can peek at the Public Timeline in two ways, neither of which appear anywhere in Twitter’s interface. The original link (
http://twitter.com/public_timeline
) still works for now. Rumor has it that you can also still access the timeline by running a search with no terms in the search box (
http://twitter.com/#search?q=Search
— thanks
@krystyna81
for this tip!) So although the true Public Timeline is gone, for old time’s sake, we left this section in the book for you to play with and think about.

The timeline includes all Twitter users who haven’t opted to protect their updates: people you follow, people you don’t follow, and people who don’t follow you. You can use the timeline to broaden your network, finding new conversations and topics, and generally expanding your presence on Twitter.

If you can get to the Public Timeline through the preceding links, it shows the most recent tweets from everyone who uses Twitter, in real time (like the page shown in Figure 3-5). It looks a lot like your own Twitter stream on your Home screen, but with more content to discover.

After you get to the Everyone timeline, spend a little time either scrolling from page to page and tweet to tweet manually or skimming for interesting conversations. (Refresh your Web browser to see the latest tweets.) If you find an interesting person or conversation, just click that Twitter handle to find out more about that user. You can also send an @reply to the tweet, which lets you just jump into the conversation, even if you don’t yet follow any of the people in it. Or, if you like what you see, you can follow someone without replying to them — follow whoever looks interesting to you!

You can check in on the Public Timeline periodically, even after you start to grow your network into the triple digits and higher. Even people who have thousands in their personal Twitter network can find fresh ideas and interesting people on the Public Timeline once in a while, which keeps their Twitter experience the most varied and interesting it can be.

Figure 3-5:
Looking at the Everyone timeline on Twitter.

Seeing Who You Follow

After you start using Twitter to its full potential, you may want to see a list of whom you follow. To see whom you follow:

1. Log in to Twitter.

On any page in Twitter, you find the sets of numbers in the upper-right sidebar labeled Following, Followers, and Updates.

2. Click Following.

A list of people you’re following appears (as shown in Figure 3-6). Currently, Twitter sorts your Following list chronologically by when you started following them, with the most recent at the top.

3. Scroll through the list manually, page by page.

This process works fine until you start to follow many more people. Without a way to sort or search — which Twitter still doesn’t have (hint, hint, Twitter!) — finding out if you follow someone specifically can become tedious after you start following more than 100 people.

Figure 3-6:
Check out the twitterers whom you’re following.

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