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Danny Brown

Danny Brown

podcaster - author - creator

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10 Fun Twitter Apps You May Not Have Heard Of

Twitter Tussle and other fun apps

Twitter Tussle and other fun apps

As the new Twitter continues to role out across the network, it’s clear that the micro-blogging platform intends to be here for the long-term.

Its initial use as a short message system has evolved into a truly multi-faceted and game-changing platform. Business, cause marketing, non-profits, customer service, lead generation and more – Twitter really does have something for everyone.

A lot of blogs (mine included) often concentrate on the best ways to use Twitter for business, and there’s nothing wrong with that. But wouldn’t it be cool to mix it up with a bit of fun too?

With that in mind, here are 10 fun apps for Twitter that you might not have heard of but are definitely worth checking out.

  1. SecretTweet. Founded in April 2008, SecretTweet allows you to tweet your darkest secrets (or those of your friends) for Twitter to comment on. There’s? a mix of the funny and bizarre on the site, though there can also be sad ones as well.
  2. Twitter Tussle. A cute little cartoon site, Twitter Tussle answers which topics are more popular on Twitter by having two cartoon Twitter birds duke it out on-screen.
  3. ASKch. A great healthcare resource, ASKch (currently in beta) from Change:Healthcare allows you to send a question about healthcare costs and options in your neighbourhood, and receive an automated response and information link within 60 seconds.
  4. Mombo. A fun and useful service, Mombo collates tweets about movies and formulates them into a review and overview of how good (or bad) that movie is according to Twitter.
  5. BollyTweet. Like Bollywood movies? Got an iPhone? BollyTweet allows you to connect and chat with your favourite Bollywood stars. And in great Bollywood fashion, you can shake your iPhone to get the latest tweets.
  6. Twitter for Busy People. Need to know at a glance what your Twitter friends are up to? Twitter for Busy People collates their images into sections (Last Hour, Last Day, More Than a Day Ago) and lets you hover over them for the latest update.
  7. CheapTweet. Almost like a Digg for deals, CheapTweet collates all the best retail offers being tweeted, and allows folks to vote on the best ones so you can save the most.
  8. Twitgift. The idea behind Twitgift is simply awesome. Want to send a gift to a Twitter friend? Choose a gift and send a tweet to them, and if they accept it gets mailed out to them. You don’t even need to know their address, Twitgift takes care of this.
  9. Twistori. A very cool visualization project, Twistori gathers tweets about six main topics – Love, Hate, Think, Believe, Feel, Wish – and runs a colourful stream with tweets about that topic.
  10. HootCourse. An interesting idea, HootCourse takes educational tweets and builds online classes around them. Virtual classrooms are created and students and teaches can meet to hold informal classes, complete with teaching materials and formats.

So there you have it. These are ten Twitter apps that might add a bit of fun to your tweeting and help mix things up a little when you want to get away from the serious stuff.

How about you – any Twitter apps you’ve found worth sharing? The comments are yours.

Image: Twitter Tussle

Social Media Informer and Aggregated Social Media News

Danny Brown at Social Media Informer

Danny Brown at Social Media InformerJoining the likes of Alltop and Social Media Today, new website Social Media Informer aims to collate the best social media news articles and blog posts and offer a one-stop shop for your social media needs.

With its tagline “The Best Content about Social Media for Business”, Social Media Informer sets its stall out from the start.

Instead of having news that may or may not be social media-related from blogs and newsfeeds that are loosely tied to social media and its business uses, Social Media Informer limits the bloggers and sources for its articles.

This can work two ways – it will either make Social Media Informer a more focused resource centre than Alltop’s social media feed, or it could narrow the news on display. Judging by the resources already on display over there, hopefully it’s the former.

At Social Media Informer, you can get the latest from very knowledgeable folks like Ari Herzog (who wrote about some of the features of Social Media Informer), Kyle Lacy, Problogger, Dave Fleet, Janet Fouts and more. I read their stuff regularly and it’s great to see them collected under one roof.

While there are a bunch of social media news resources already, hopefully Social Media Informer offers a more business-led approach for those who need it.

Check Social Media Informer out today – you might even see a familiar face… 😉

Note: While my blog is syndicated at Social Media Informer, this is my own take on the service. No payments have been exchanged.

If Social Media Was a Cartoon

(This post contains a video. Can’t see it in your feed? Click here to view it in full.)

The 7 Day Blog Challenge – Just Kickin’ It, Lectrify and Princess Tweep

Just Kickin' It with Jac Star

So earlier this week I wrote about the 7 Day Blog Challenge, and how it’d be cool to share new bloggers with each other.

So, to kick things off from me, I’m going to share Days 1, 2 and 3 with you today. Hopefully you enjoy these blogs as much as I do – make sure to subscribe to them and share if you enjoy!

Just Kickin’ It

Just Kickin It with Jac Star

Okay, so Just Kickin’ It is a little bit biased as it belongs to my wife Jacki. BUT… it’s a really enjoyable blog that has a little bit of everything. There’s humour, book reviews, funny videos and a great series called Word of the Day. Jacs has also upped her blogging quota to about 2-3 times a week now, so offers a frequent escape from the business blogs I read.

Lectrify

Lectrify by Laura Williams

A pretty new blog, Lectrify is by my friend and ex-colleague (from my contract at Maritz Canada) Laura L. Williams. I already knew Laura was a great copywriter; what I didn’t know is that she’s also a natural blogger. Lectrify shares Laura’s insights on life, people, pop culture and entertainment and is always an entertaining (and often educational) read.

The Adventures of Princess Tweep

The Adventures of Princess Tweep

What can I say about The Adventures of Princess Tweep? Written by the uber-cool Princess Tweep, it’s a cute and funny look at just how serious us folks in the social media space can take ourselves. Often told from a newscast angle, you might recognize yourself in this blog a few times. Whether that’s a good or bad thing is up to you!

Your Turn

So there you go. That’s the first three blogs I wanted to share that might not normally fall within your reading niche. I really do hope you check them out and, like I said earlier, subscribe if you like them.

So how about you? What blogs will you be sharing?

Leave yours in the comments or, if you do write your own post, leave a link and we’ll check it out!

Why I’m Loving the Livefyre Comments System

Livefyre comments system

Livefyre comments systemRegular readers of this blog will have noticed the introduction of the Livefyre comment system.

While I’ve written in the past about my reasons to go back to the WordPress comments system, I saw Livefyre in use on a couple of blogs I enjoy and was intrigued enough to check the system out.

While it’s not perfect (and, to be fair, it’s still in beta), having used Livefyre for a week or so now, I’m really enjoying the experience.

So, what’s Livefyre comments all about then?

Comments and Community

On first inspection, Livefyre looks like much like the other main third-party comments systems (Disqus, IntenseDebate and Echo). Looking to combine real-time commenting with building a thriving blog community, Livefyre has all the usual requisites – threaded comments, voting, social sharing, etc.

But it’s when you start using Lifefyre that you can see the goal behind the company – to build a solid commenting community where everyone is “accountable” (this isn’t as Big Brother-ish as it sounds).

By not having the normal Name, Email and URL options, but instead letting you comment either by Twitter, Facebook or your own Livefyre account, the aim is to stop both comment trolls and spam, and improve the visitor experience to any blog with Livefyre installed.

At first, I wasn’t sure about this approach (and raised it in the comments over at the Livefyre blog). However, I can see what the Livefyre guys are trying to achieve with the non-open approach and I do applaud their goal.

And, I have to say, since installing Livefyre, my spam has been zero (I guess spam bots don’t have the patience to sign up for a dedicated account). So, in that respect, the Livefyre approach works.

Real-Time Chat and Replies

Similar to the system that both Disqus and Echo have, Livefyre offers a live comment stream that updates and refreshes as new entries are posted (using the same technology behind Friendfeed). Where Livefyre differs is with the “New Comment” notification bar that pops up when a new comment has been left.

As well as being a cool feature to let you know when someone’s left a new point of view, the immediate advantage this offers is the way that your comment system is now a true, live stream. Think of it as Twitter for blog comments.

When you see the notification, you can jump to the comment itself and hit Reply with your take. This looks similar to Twitter’s “@” option, and will reply directly to that person (or more – Livefyre supports multiple responses).

Livefyre real-time chat comments

If the commenter is still on the site, you can then start a back-and-forth debate all in real-time. Additionally, if the commenter signed in using their Twitter account, then the reply will ping back to them via Twitter and continue the conversation that way.

I’m already thinking of ways to implement this in some upcoming posts, but I think Livefyre’s onto a real winner with this feature.

Checking in to Comments

One of the very cool features that I like is the ability to check into a conversation. This is similar to being notified when a new comment is posted, but with one big difference – you can just follow the conversation without even checking the blog post out.

While this might go against the idea of blog commenting – how can you comment when you don’t know the topic? – it actually expands it. Think about it – you can be down your local sports bar and take part in a conversation about a game, without having seen it. That doesn’t matter – you know the topic and have your own views on the team, player(s), etc.

Livefyre’s check in option allows the same. Many bloggers (myself included) have bemoaned that the likes of Twitter and Facebook could be taking conversations away from your blog and over to these platforms. Sure, your post is being discussed, but unless you follow every outlet you won’t know where and who by.

With Livefyre’s check-in, folks that are connected to your readers can see the conversation that’s happening and jump in to discuss their point of view with their friends. While initially they might not read your post, the opportunity to do so grows with the conversation around it.

This, again, has the potential to be one of Livefyre’s defining benefits.

Other Features

As well as the three features I really like that I’ve highlighted above, Livefyre has a ton of other cool stuff up its sleeve. These include:

  • Comment voting and user reputation (and to give someone a negative vote, you have to use one of your positive votes – a great way to discourage flame wars).
  • Full SEO-friendliness.
  • On-page real-time moderation (Hide Comment or Delete – hide still keeps the comment, just not public, you have to click to open).
  • Ban abusive users.
  • Invite conversations with friends from other networks.
  • Multiple comment moderators and owners.
  • Ability to custom design your comments.
  • Live user count.
  • Email notification of new comments and replies.

So, by the sounds of it, Livefyre is the comment system everyone should use, right? Maybe. Maybe not.

Not Quite Perfect – Yet

Livefyre sign in optionsAs I mentioned earlier in the post, Livefyre doesn’t allow for generic Name, Email and URL commenting.

You can use Twitter or Facebook to sign up with if you don’t want to open a Livefyre account (though to get the best from Livefyre, an account definitely helps), but you can’t just use a name and email to comment.

While this is great for combating spam and trolls, it might put bloggers off (as well as commenters who don’t want to sign in with Twitter or Facebook, nor create a Livefyre account).

(To be fair, I had my reservations about a non-URL comment system, but so far I haven’t had any issues because of it.)

It doesn’t (currently) support the CommentLuv system either, which is a shame, as this is one of my all-time favourite comment add-ons. Having said that, though, Livefyre CEO Jordan Kretchmer has said he’d love to talk to Andy Bailey (the CommentLuv creator) to see what can be done.

Also, because you have the option to delete your comment (or restart it to correct mistakes), it can lead to duplicate comments. This is only in the blog dashboard, admittedly, but it can throw comment counts off until you delete the non-comment.

It also seems to share the same “bug” that Disqus often has, in that when you click on “Read Comments” (or similar) at the top of a blog post, you aren’t automatically taken to the comments area. However, this could be a bug that will be ironed out when Livefyre comes out its beta stage.

I’d also like to see some way that comments made on Twitter or Facebook (or other social networks) could be seamlessly transferred back to the blog post and into the bigger conversation for true social integration, as opposed to the social mentions approach that Disqus has. Livefyre have said they have some cool upcoming features, so who knows?

Should You Use Livefyre?

So, I guess the main question that’s left is should you use Livefyre when it’s out of beta?

As someone who’s previously spoken on why I don’t use third-party comment systems, I have to say Livefyre has changed my mind. Not only are all your comments saved to WordPress in case you want to change back, all the threaded discussions are saved as well, so the comments don’t look funky if you switch Livefyre off (something all too obvious when moving away from Disqus).

Also, while the idea of a velvet rope comment community seems at odds with “normal” open comments, Livefyre doesn’t actually feel like a closed community. With more than 500 million Facebook users, and 150 million Twitter users, even if you don’t want to create a Livefyre account you should be covered.

And the immediate effect on spam and comment trolls can’t be discounted (though I’ve been hugely fortunate with the great community here when it comes to comments and respect).

The system is also mobile-friendly, which isn’t always the case with other third-party systems (I tested with my BlackBerry browser and had no issues).

My take? If you like the idea of real-time chat and a comments system that fosters respect and accountability, as well as a ton of other cool features, Livefyre is the best third-party option around.

Even if you’re not a fan of anything but standard WordPress comments because of the “overkill” options that can happen with third-party comments, Livefyre offers a really clean solution that’s almost the next best thing to vanilla WordPress comments.

The service so far has also been awesome. Combine that with a pretty cool product, and you can’t ask for much more than that.

In that respect, I can’t recommend Livefyre enough.

If you’re interested in signing up for the beta of Livefyre Comments, hop on over to the homepage and you can request it there.

  • Note – Livefyre is currently available for the WordPress (self-hosted version) platform, with TypePad and Tumblr versions to follow.
  • Update: I’ve since reverted to the vanilla WordPress comments as part of my blog redesign.
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