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i don't really want to give up twitter... but may have to choose between twitter, jaiku or pownce (which I have accounts on too). Keeping up with 3 is just too much for me and I honestly don't know how some people do. If it comes to the case where it is really affecting work or personal time -- i think i might have to quit too. it is becoming dangerously close though -- just have to watch myself.
good luck and hope to see you back on twitter again!
-- thefoo (twitter name)
I was like that at one point, and I just cut down on the number of people I followed.
So far today, I just have a few dozen Tweets.
One way I streamlined was to stop following people who weren't following me.
Sort of hard to have a conversation with them if they don't see my Tweets.
@Shawn, I think I might have to do that, cut down to people who only follow me. Maybe I'll try that first.
I use the Firefox plugin, Twitbin, so I can just pull up the tweets in the side of the screen and I normally just read what's going on right then. I will occasionally look further back in the history - if I feel I've missed something. But keeping up with everything everyone has said? No way.
Web 2.0 activities eat up too much of my time already!
What I am noticing is that I'm going back to reading longer formats (like blogs), because I hate having to weed through numerous tweets when someone puts together an insightful thought. It's almost like we're forcing ourselves to be soundbite-y because of 140 character limits (which we can easily get around anyway at the risk of being a conversation-spammer :)
It freaked me out.
Twitter is challenging in that there is really good stuff in there, plus a lot of noise. There's no easy way to filter.
I also turn off twitter notifications and just ignore it from time to time and have 1 day a week twitter free. There is always something going on that we won't know about and that is ok. Grazing on twitter will give you a good picture on what is going on, but don't obsess about getting it all.
I was mostly offline for about a week (travel - I don't drive and tweet) and when I came back not that much had happened. I had missed a few details here and there, but many of those were transient details anyway.
So my advice would be: pick who you follow carefully, get a client that has a limited buffer of tweets, take breaks, and know that the tweets you miss won't really make a big difference in the end.
Get a desktop client like Twitterific for Mac or Snitter for Mac/PC or Tweetr for PC and let the flow roll.
I'm with Marshall...
http://marshallk.com/twitter-is-paying-my-rent
I agree with Marshall too, but I'm not a publisher who writes 10 stories a day. If I was, I'd be glued to Twitter.
But I do know what you mean by an information overload, it is almost a sensory overload sometimes.
Then, the 'reciprocal' thing is not so important for me - the important thing for me It's not the number of people I follow on Twitter, but the kind&size of information flow they produce.
Some people usually write many interesting things, but at the same time they fill my twitter stream: I don't want to lose what they say, so I cutted off them from my following list on twitter and I subscribed their blog feed.
I picture Twitter as a river that's always flowing, and I stop by its banks once in a while during the day (okay, a LOT of times during the day!), to see what's passing by. I'm content to let what I miss flow by without my attention. I obsessively check "Replies" to see if anyone's responding directly to a Tweet of mine.
Once in a while, I do need to reboot by staying offline for several days at a time, like taking a Zen retreat for a week of silence. Then everything looks new again, and I can go back to the river with new appreciation for what's flowing by.
I too think the Outlook tool was a bad idea.
Oh, and don't forget, you can have more than one.
1) don't feel like you have to read every twitter post from everyone
2) cut back on the number of people you follow
3) use twitterific when you are online
4) use the web client when you are not
i don't try to read every post in every feed i am subscribed to and i treat twitter posts the same way. when i am somewhere outside of ny, like i am in sf now, i try to follow my sf friends on my phone, but then i turn them off
there's lots that twitter can and should do to make all of this easier. i know they are working on a lot of this
fred
Also, since tracking doesn't limit itself to just your followers/followees, you get insight and tweets you might otherwise miss, and you also find new people talking about your interests that you might want to actually follow (or subscribe to their blog directly, say).
I would like to see more options for filtering and searching tweets and twitterers, personally. The queries-per-hour limitation imposed on clients basically means this is something Twitter itself needs to address; it's my understanding that these types of ideas are very much being worked on.
Given well-crafted lists of keywords, and some ability to filter/search them as necessary, you can indeed end up with a (generally) more focused, shorter list of items to read. You can still read the massive flow of tweets at your leisure, but if you instead set up filters in Outlook (or Google Reader, which is what I use to 'collect' tweets en masse), or tracking keywords with Twitter itself, you really get the best situation, and can free yourself from the urge to read -everything- as it happens.
Plus ask yourself why you use twitter and find the twitterapp that fits this need the best.
ex: I track my blog's main keywords on Twitter to grab discussions I can relate to and easily infiltrate.
I'm still twitter-less after a day or so, doing ok. I almost logged in to check it today, almost.
I also attempted to install the firefox plugin someone suggested, but it didn't work for me. I couldn't get it to login.
Probably best )
Again, the idea is instead of Twitter using you, you use Twitter. ;)
Good luck.
This post was written in November... have you gotten back into Twitter again?
http://www.twitter.com/jimkukral
I'll do a video about why I'm back at some point so subscribe to this blog feed!
Mike Power's last blog post..Sunday PaperRound 23/03/2008