Here's a word cloud from the tweet-up I described yesterday. Because of the way Twitter operates, a text analysis tends to emphasize the presenters rather than the content of their posts.
But this still represents a great tribute to the diversity of those participating.
Friday, March 30, 2012
Thursday, March 29, 2012
A Tweet-up About Musems and Social Media
Screen shot of Twitterfall from Wikimedia Commons |
This is an event where a particular hash-tag is chosen, and then a large group of people tweet during a pre-determined time period using that hash-tag. The result is a long-distance, transcontinental dialogue, broken up into 140-character messages. Brilliant!
This one was about museums and social media (= social networking) and the hashtag was #musesocial.
Ideas are exchanged, arguments ensue, explanations are made, questions are asked and suggestions are offered. A lot of learning takes place.
It isn't easy to get the hang of this, of course. Over the space of five hours or 300 minutes, I counted over 1200 on-topic tweets. That's about 4 tweets a minute or one every 15 seconds. And they can come in clusters, so it's challenging to keep up. If you stop to compose an answer to someone you can get lost in a hurry.
I first tried following the action with my normal Twitter feed, but that didn't work because there were lots of people participating who I don't already follow. Then I tried a Twitter search for the hash-tag du jour, but all I got was an out-of-sequence and way-behind series of tweets that could not be used to participate.
My salvation was a nice website called twitterfall.com. They allow you to search on a particular hash-tag and then deliver a chronologically sequential stream of up-to-the-minute tweets. You can pause the stream if you want, and it pauses automatically if you choose one of the tweets to respond to.
An exhilarating experience of high-octane communication.
Hello World!
This is the first.
I'm getting excited about blogging.
The sky's the limit (I'm not excited about cliches, but they don't bother all that much me).
Use the language of the people! Today I saw an ad on the back of a bus that said, "We got you covered."
I'm getting excited about blogging.
The sky's the limit (I'm not excited about cliches, but they don't bother all that much me).
Use the language of the people! Today I saw an ad on the back of a bus that said, "We got you covered."
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