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Monday
Aug172009

Quote of the Day: Taking Your Tweets Back Home



"I'm done with the lock-down and down-times. My micro and macro personal blogs will all flow through here (Posterous) out to Twitter, FriendFeed, Facebook, etc and the intake valve is Google Reader and GMail."

New platforms not only unleash my creativity and curiosity, but they help me find new voices. I started to follow Chris Brogan more closely after I saw his posts on Facebook. {osterous has brought me Sam Harrelson who is sharing tidbits like these for using this platform as a launch pad for everything else.

I haven't gone this far yet yet. However, given the probably pending demise of Friendfeed and how well Posterous works with the iPhone I am considering it for all but the RT's and the @s.

How about you - are you taking your Tweets back home?


Reader Comments (8)

I sure love the concept you describe, Steve and I can't wait to try it out.Twitter's downtime forced me to rethink my social media usage. So, I joined identi.ca, and revisted plurk.com. My colleague and social media consultant Carmina Perez and I chatted a little about this in our weekly social media video (youtube.com/mogulette). The takeaway is that companies that are doing customer service and other critical work on Twitter, well, this is a good sign that it is clearly time to diversify and it's time to help/convince/remind your Twitter followers to also join you in other channels like your e-mail lists, blogs, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc..Lock-in to one vendor is never a good thing, even Twitter. Be nice if the open-source microblogging movement gets traction. Twitter's outage showed us that this is a tool we need in the digital world and it has to be reliable.

August 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMo Krochmal

I've detailed how I implemented my social media safety net here http://bit.ly/8CeUj Long story short, when you rely on hosted services alone (even posterous!), you never "own" your content.

August 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKevin Donahue

Yep, already doing it. And following all of you here on posterous (you know who you are LOL) is the fuel for my fire. Posterous is quite simply the tool that I cannot do without right now. FF is nice but like Twitter is dominated by a few heavyweights who dominate the airwaves and don't let smaller voices be heard. Facebook is a nice way to keep in touch with personal friends (and also to reconnect with lost ones). But it's not really a publication vehicle and certainly not a business tool as their founders would like you to believe.Posterous, in addition to being a great and fluid platform for thoughts and ideas, is far more democratic in process, allowing the small voice to be heard and enjoined with the big voices - a use that seems to be the one for which it was intended. The constant evolution of the product, the way its founders participate and actually use the service, are examples of this greatness. When was the last time Biz or Evan or whomever made a salient post on their respective services that actually got you excited (well maybe announcing you were going to be on Oprah counts, really not sure)?Posterous is awesome and useful and participatory. QED.

August 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterChris Sparno

Some very important issues being raised here. I think I still fall back on blogging Steve. The "owning" issues and the rest. I am looking forward to hearing you discuss this at length.

August 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJim Turner

Jim, I agree with the whole "owning your content" thing - which is why I moved my blog from blogger to a self managed Wordpress blog. But I get around this issue by cross posting from Posterous to my cjsparno.com blog which I own, ensuring the data will be there for me if Posterous does something nutty, which I imagine they will not (but you never know). How was that for a disclaimer ;)

August 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterChris Sparno

Sharing inanities seems unproductive-doubled.Knowing enough on a subject to share limits the amount and number of sharings. How can I find all those wonderful, smart, practical, considerate people who agree with me?

August 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterBarry Dennis

How about just getting my tweets back since 5,000 of them disappeared?? :( http://bit.ly/1WFqlP

August 19, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterbeiruta

Yesterday, I decided to go hardcore and setup Sweetcron for lifestreaming. It sucks down all my Tweets, flickr photostream, delicious bookmarks, RSS feed I throw its way, etc. It's like Friendfeed (sorta) that you host. I keep my Sweetcron lifestream but now have a public Friendfeed. http://bit.ly/WvXfP

August 20, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterEvans Thompson

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