TechComm or TextComm - To Twitter or Not Pt. 1
When Twitter first came out, I wondered if it would ever fit into the mainstream. I had no interest because, in the words of one article, people were Twittering what they had for breakfast and other complete nonsense.
I didn’t see the use for me. Why would I waste the time to Tweet (send a short Twitter message) a meal or read someone else’s Tweets. Maybe for a celebrity, but not for me.
That was until the October 2007 wildfires. Being able to receive evacuation notices and gauge the amount of progress and success of the effort was critical to all San Diegans. We were all connected. We were informed. Twitter, and the adoption by tech-savvy EMS teams made that a reality.
Being able to receive it all on my cell phone in SMS short message format was, in my opinion, priceless.
Shortly I’ll start beta testing a similar product created by a San Diego company. This Twitter successor has some greater potential in the realm of audio and pictures - MMS vs. SMS technology along with the standard Twitter features.
While this already exists in several products on the market, I know the people involved with this one so I’ll see what they have going on that’s different. There’s definitely a podcast in it somewhere.
Twitter and Blogging
It’s been long used for updating your ‘power commenters’ about a new blog post. Debbie Weil’s BlogWrite for CEOs latest blogging tip:
The way to get attention for your blog these days is to tweet your new blog post to your “followers” on Twitter.
According to Wikipedia, prominent usage of Twitter has included emergency personnel and others:
Many organizations (such as the Los Angeles Fire Department[5]) have embraced the technology and put it to use in situations such as the October 2007 California wildfires.
Prominent Twitter users include U.S. presidential candidates Ron Paul,[6] John Edwards, Barack Obama,[7] and Hillary Clinton.[8]
Higher education is also using the technology to relay important information to students in a more timely manner. Such is the case with The University of Texas at San Antonio College of Engineering.[9]
Twitter and Technical Communication
I’m gathering information about Twitter or other SMS usage with TechComm. Could you see any use for Twitter with Technical Communication? Perhaps in notifying team members on a time crunch that updates are ready to review?
Or Twitter missing a link - is it yet one more piece of technology which hasn’t quite matured enough?
Posted by Charles in Blogging, Online Collaboration, Software, Technical Communication, Web 2.0, Workflow Collaboration | Comment now »
