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While the Iron is Hot
That might make me a purist, but there need to be a few of us to balance out the everyone-followers.
Partly because I'm interested in how twitter is used in different ways, partly because I'm interested in the content.
But NASA with @marsphoenix gets it much better than most media (NPR and the PBS Newshour are among the exceptions with both staff and the organization participating in the conversation).
I also follow @esvdaily (Bible verses), but now that I follow hundreds of people I never see its tweets.
I guess it's just another way I'm using twitter - a means to an end: Conversation, resources, and, news updates.
if the robot serves a purpose to the user, so be it.
I might like tidbits of wisdom--Broganisms, if you will, if there were a way to distinguish your twitter-robot-alias from tweets straight from the source. (Same would go for anyone or organization w/a TRA.)
However- I really dislike it when people tell me how to use Twitter (my use has evolved dramatically over time and will continue to evolve, and all of it was/is "right")- so if the automated tweets work for some folks, that's great.
On the other hand, as much as I respect Tom, if he can't be bothered with really being on Twitter, then maybe I can't be bothered with following the wowbot.
I see Twitter as wider than a social networking service - one of my own servers has a bot (restricted to people who I authorise to follow it) that sends out a system-generated set of KPIs at 3pm every day to our managers... If that was the ONLY thing I did with Twitter, then I'd regard it as a mobile phone enablement service :-)
I do have my blog entries auto-posted to Twitter, because it's a timesaver and I spend enough time on the titles that they're probably what I'd Tweet anyway... but I make sure that bot posts are well under 10% of what I tweet - the majority is engaging in others' conversation.
Besides, I've never read Pride and Prejudice.
It's interesting that Tom sees all of this value in Twitter, and yet at the same time feels limited by the 140 character limit. I don't really understand his position here.
Bots are OK if they are providing useful information. Especially with Twitter, where you choose your own information stream, why complain about purity? Just stop following the bots.
Then I won't be getting my 'fix' of Tom on Twitter. I use Twitter as a tool to connect with and talk to others. Not to be marketed to with no way to respond.
Hooray real robots!