Apr 16 2009

LinkedOUT

linkedoutYou might have heard of LinkedIn.com the website that allows you to connect with professional people you know, have worked with, or want to work with. You can stay informed with contacts, reconnect with people, and maybe even learn something (although I find the last part lacking).

But, more importantly in the business world is not who you have worked with but who you have worked with that is a douche. How do you tell the desired contacts from the no-talent hacks who comprise many of the people you come into contact with everyday? I am proposing a site that let’s you know who’s been cut-off, excommunicated, and silently sent out to pasture.

The same way LinkedIn works, except for recommending people and adding friends you will only flame the losers and remove people from contact lists. It would be a spider-web of bad feelings and broken promises. Can you think of anything better? Even if you got listed you would get a kick out of who unfriended you. I’m gonna start working on it now….

 

thanks to larry d for the idea, even if i did bastardize it – he’s cut off anyway.


Jan 14 2009

Best Mobile Twitter Apps

 

aford on twitter's bird

aford on twitter's bird

Thanks to Twitter and good co-workers my new blog is 12 days old and just hit 1200 hits.

I am passionate for people to get on Twitter and create their own set of followers and followed tweeters. (FOLLOW aford ON TWITTER HERE) Twitter is a micro-blogging platform that allows only 140 characters for messages given and messages received. Twitter asks the question, “What are you doing?” when you finally create a profile. That question is a bit misleading once you really figure out what you want out of Twitter. Because you might want to know what someone else is doing? You might want to know where the best place to find a deal online might be? Or, where the  next meeting is at? You pick it, Twitter is the info-philes source of choice for cutting edge, early adopters. All I can say is act now, before your grandma gets in and kills the flow. 

I have also found that one of the best ways for those of you who spend a good portion of your day away from your desk  to keep connected via Twitter is through your mobile device. Now I know that Blackberry has an application called Twitterberry – but since I use the iPhone I will talk about the apps that I have found “ridonkulous” and the one I have finally settled upon. 

1. Tweetie – My personal favorite because it gives you a clean looking interface, great functionality, and has yet to fail me on a single post…well, maybe one post. Still – this is the new go to guy for me through the phone.

2. Twitterriffic – This one has all the bells, buttons, and whistles with a desktop client to boot. I didn’t like the lack of ability to reply in direct message to users without using the dreaded and oft failed ‘D’ functionality.

3. Twitterlator – Didn’t like the way this one segmented out my twitter feed. Ugly and lacks some functions. 

4. Twitterfon – Failed often and seemed to crash on some critical message moments. Also doesn’t sync with your actual Twitter account. Shows messages as active after you have already read them.

5. Twittervision – The best thing about this application is the world view it gives as tweets come in from around the globe. The worst thing is you can’t just see you feeds easily. So you get two Japanese tweets, then a dude from France and finally some “Nancy” from Delaware. It’s randomness is cool when you start up, but after you have an established following list you really want to hear what those people have to say. I will say the desktop page is neat.