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While the Iron is Hot
I've used it the way you described though, checking on someone who has gone silent to see if it is just me they aren't talking to.
I like the relaxed and easy atmosphere that allows me to share what's going on, ask questions, get quick and thoughtful responses, as well as see the kinds of things that are currently getting people excited, bothered, or happy. It's like being tuned into a barometer of human nature.
More seriously: I do NOT use it for anything I want to be sure somebody will see, because I assume that they might be using it the way I do: I look at it, but I make no attempt to see every tweet from everyone I follow. If I'm off it for 24 hours, I left the room for that time, and I missed the conversation. I do try to go check for @ replies to me that I missed, but I don't always see them all.
I use it to get some human contact during the day, to see what people are chatting about, to throw out questions that the smart people I follow might have some answers to or interesting thoughts about, that kind of thing. Sort of chat room / focus group / place to yell for help / place to sound off all at once.
i use it to check in with friends and see what everyone is up to; i follow threads and interesting people (how i got here!).
great for on the fly meetups, getting a quick answer from a huge pool of people.
As a young professional, Twitter has been an amazing source of advice, guidance, encouragement and support.
As a human being, I have found and developed some of my closest (real-time) friendships on Twitter. I have met incredible people who have made me laugh, enlightened me, showed concern and empathy when I've been down and overall, have greatly added to my life.
For me, joining Twitter was a life changing event. I know that sounds kinda ridiculous but it is true. My life has been richer, more fulfilling and far more passionate ever since I walked into Professor Quigley's class, met Amanda Gravel and was convinced that Twitter was not stalkerish.
Why do you think I have so few tweets? I prefer to keep my whereabouts and activities somewhat close to the vest.
Chris: two major uses of Twitter are (1) to find out about breaking news (for example, I learned of Charlton Heston's death on Twitter) and (2) for technical support.
Also, as I noted earlier (via Twitter, of course), if you really want to detect someone's presence, their FriendFeed account (or other lifestream aggregator) might be a better tool. Sometimes I'm tweeting, sometimes I'm publishing in other ways.
But what I use it right now is for a dual-flow. One being *spark* information that will get an idea or conversation going based on something totally irrelevant.
The other way is *gossip* really. Keeping up with what the people I follow are doing.