The million year old blog
15 Jun
This keeps popping up in conversations… so… time for a blog post.
I have a Twitter account, mainly because nowadays not having one can make life a tad complicated. There are many people and organizations who’s Twitter posts are the only real way of staying in the loop with them. But I don’t really use Twitter, and I really do not in any way like the service.
What appears on my Twitter page is actually my Facebook activities that get forwarded to Twitter via this brilliant little tool: IFTTT, and I basically log onto the service every once in a very very blue moon. That being said, if I’m following you on Twitter, that means I DO see your posts. How? Well… that’s where it gets complicated and here’s also one of the major reasons why I don’t like Twitter.
You see, Twitter actually has user feeds. Or “had”, to be more precise. They were never highly advertised, didn’t show up on the user pages and didn’t get detected by browsers, but they were active and I generally developed the habit of subscribing to the RSS feeds of the people I follow, and checking their updates on Feedly [or previously GReader], which is what I actually do check pretty frequently. This wasn’t working too badly, but a while back, Twitter made some changes to their API which resulted in a change in the general format of the feed address. Major pain, as I had to re-subscribe to all the feeds. Now, as of last week, Twitter has officially retired their REST API 0.1, and with it, their RSS feeds!!
Of course someone already came up with a service to take care of this problem [probably using Google Scripts or something similar], so now you can use “Twitter-RSS” to generate Twitter RSS feeds… well… obviously. But then this also means one more round of re-subscription to _all_ my Twitter contacts, yes, all the 80-something of them. But the real disaster is of course happening to anyone who ever wrote a piece of code using the V0.1 API…. and from what I’ve seen, it’s a good number of people. Ask me again why I just luuuv Twitter.
So anyway, you can see my Facebook activities on Twitter, and I can see your Tweets via Feedly, which works but is slightly dysfunctional, and a tad ridiculous. So, if you would like to keep in touch / stay in the loop with me, how about just trying my Facebook instead? As much as I’m not a big fan of Facebook, for a long list of reasons, it’s what I’m currently actively using.
6 Responses for "How And Why I Don’t [& Won’t] Use Twitter!"
Yeah well I'm one of those unlucky sods who now has to deal with broken code thanks to Twitter. Or maybe I'm just going to stop using Twitter altogether too. 🙁
Cool URI's don't change:
http://www.w3.org/Provider/Style/URI.html
Maybe cool API's don't either.
Few things are persistent on the Web. That's why the Internet Archive is a great tool (if only it was a little better).
But what do you do about API's that change or are retired? There's no real backup.
Maybe some day, we will have not only persistent data but also persistent API's where neither are tied to one giant Web company sitting in giant cloud centers but both are controlled and released by peers in a distributed fashion.
The promise of P2P has not been fulfilled to a fraction of its potential. Let's see what the next decade brings.
@Bent: +1
Also: Well I'm afraid there's absolutely nothing "cool" about anything Twitter ever does. =P
From one perspective it's a lobotimized form of blogging. From another it's both a public conversation platform and a personal broadcast platform. I find it hard to keep up with the constant flow of thoughts I've subscribed to on there though (and rarely do).
I could not agree more with you though I enjoy regularly catching all sorts of information chunks via its feeds… About decentralizing conversation and hosting, I would recommend getting in touch with indiewebcamp.com communities ^_^
@Shal: Thanks for the suggestions, I'll certainly check it out. =)
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