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Update: Twitter just fixed it. Tweets now display properly or not at all.

If you’re crafty, you can now publish a tweet longer than 140 characters. It’s not a feature, but rather a bug, so don’t expect it to be possible for much longer.

We first read about the bug in the Twitter Development Talk Google Group, where forum user Chris White posted a step-by-step of how to make it happen. He wrote that you go directly to the Twitter Share URL (http://twitter.com/share?url=) in the Firefox web browser and put your tweet’s text after “url=” — for example, “http://twitter.com/share?url=This is a test of the Twitter 140 character bug.”

The result is a tweet box with a shortened http://t.co/ link (that’s Twitter’s URL shortener). Then you can just click the tweet button and the full-length tweet will go out on your account. It will display properly on Twitter ’s website, but many third-party web, desktop or mobile apps will fail to show the whole message.

Twitter user TenhoMania published a tweet that included the entire first chapter of the book of Genesis from the Hebrew Bible — not a wholly original idea at this point, but special for its 3,000+ character length, at least. That and several other lengthy tweets have been retweeted numerous times.

Twitter employee John Adams posted a thanks to Chris White on Google Groups for exposing the bug, and said, “I filed a bug with our webclient team,” so a fix is sure to come in the very near future.

Article Source: Mashable

what's happening?

what's happening?

The micro-blogging social network Twitter has launched a New FIFA World Cup fan website. It allows you to connect with the players, teams and gets you the newest updates by joining the real-time tweets.

Characteristics:

  • Show the real-time tweets.
  • Top tweets
  • Upcoming Matches
  • Flags of all countries

Not only that, but have fun supporting your team by adding the flag of the country with each tweet. HOW?!! Type hashtags and the symbol. Example: If you are a fan of Spain type #ESP, Brasil #BRA, England #ENG and so on… Show your support and have fun tweeting!

Here is a screen shot of how the website looks like :

FIFA World Cup 2010

FIFA World Cup 2010

Article Source: PC World

Twitter is recovering from an unspecified technical problem that affected the microblogging service’s main site and its APIs (application programming interfaces) for about one hour late Tuesday morning.

Twitter is almost done fixing the issue but the service hasn’t fully returned to normal availability levels yet, the company said in its official Twitter Status blog.

“We had a system-side issue this morning starting around [11 a.m. U.S. Eastern Time] that resulted in Twitter.com experiencing two 30 minute back-to-back incidents over roughly one hour,” the note reads.

Prior to the problems on Tuesday, Twitter had been having a solid month of June with only two minutes of downtime, according to Web performance monitoring company Pingdom.

Twitter logged 52 minutes of downtime last month, for a 99.88 percent uptime rate, and was better in April when it was down for 37 minutes, according to Pingdom.

Attention to Twitter’s availability and performance issues increases along with the service’s booming global popularity as the preferred tool for individuals, celebrities and companies to communicate with a massive audience via short text status updates. In February, Twitter said that its users post 50 million tweets per day, or an average of 600 per second.

The company was once notorious for its frequent and extended outages but has improved significantly, although it still slips. For example, in August of last year it had more than six hours of downtime and in October more than five hours. Its worst month so far this year was January with 89 minutes of downtime, according to Pingdom.

Article source : PC World

Twitter users had a big shock on Monday when they checked into the micro-blogging service. Their follower and following numbers were at 0, meaning they were suddenly very unpopular or something was seriously wrong with the site.

It was the latter, of course. To kill a bug that allowed a user to force other users to follow him or her, Twitter temporarily reset all follower/following counts to zero, according to the Twitter Status blog. Everything was back to normal by 11 a.m. Pacific.

“We identified and resolved a bug that permitted a user to “force” other users to follow them. We’re now working to rollback all abuse of the bug that took place,” the company said.

The glitch didn’t cause protected (private) updates to become public, according to Twitter, which did not report the number of users impacted by the bug.

According to tech blog Gizmodo, the security hole allowed users to get any fellow Tweeter–even famous folk with “Verified Accounts”–to follow them.

Using Twitter’s web interface, you could have tweeted “accept conanobrien” (that’s Gizmodo’s example, but any username would have worked), waited a few moments, and then checked your list of followers.

Voilà! Another fan of your clever 140-character observations. Well, that is, until Twitter killed the bug.

Avatar

Article Source: BBC News

Micro-blogging service Twitter can be used to predict the future box-office takings of blockbuster films, according to researchers at Hewlett Packard (HP).

The computer scientists studied 3 million messages – known as tweets – about 25 movies, including Avatar.

They found the rate at which messages were produced could be used to accurately predict the box office takings before the film opened.

Further analysis of the content of the messages could predict ongoing success.

“Our predictions were incredibly close,” Bernardo Huberman, head of the social computing lab at HP, told BBC News.

For example, he said, the system predicted that zombie film The Crazies would take $16.8m in its first weekend in the US. It actually took $16.06m.

The team forecast that romantic drama Dear John would take $30.71m in its first US weekend. It took $30.46m.

The unpublished research has been posted on the Arxiv website.

Social sentiment

The team were able to make their first-weekend revenue predictions by analyzing the torrent of tweets about a particular film in the run up to its release.

“We developed algorithms to analyse these tweets and measure the rate at which they were produced, said Dr Huberman.

“Our intuition was that the faster people tweet, the more likely they are to go and see it.”

Twitter screenshot

The teams were then able to forecast the ongoing success of a film, including its second weekend revenues, by doing what is known as sentiment analysis.

This analyses the content of tweets and decides whether it is positive, negative or neutral.

“It’s tapping into collective intelligence,” said Dr Huberman, who carried out the work with Sitaram Asur, also of HP.

The team trained their system using Amazon’s Mechanical Turk, an online tool that pays people to perform small tasks that computers would struggle to complete.

“We got people to classify tweets and we used that to calibrate the sentiment analysis,” explained Dr Huberman.

Again, the system tracked the fortunes of movies and outperformed other predictive systems such as the Hollywood Stock Exchange, he said.

For example, analysis showed a boom in positive sentiment about the Oscar-nominated The Blind Side after it was released, but showed the opposite affect for New Moon, which initially sold well but rapidly lost viewers.

“Word of mouth builds audience,” said Jan Saxton, vice president and senior films analyst at Adams Media Research.

She highlighted the film My Big fat Greek Wedding, which she said became the “film of the year” in 2002 by recommendations.

“If word of mouth becomes a faster, more effective marketing tool, then the effect on the movie business could be profound.”

Both Dr Huberman and Ms Saxton said that the demographic of Twitter – which tends to be young, tech-savvy and reasonably affluent – may limit the utility of the system for analysis of some trends, such as those aimed at children.

However, Dr Huberman believes it could be of use in forecasting other trends, such as how well a gadget or product will sell.

Elements such as sentiment analysis are also being used by other groups.

For example, it is being used by an organization called Tweetminster to monitor the UK general election to work out whether online buzz correlates with the winners.

BREAKING: Twitter Acquires Tweetie

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Article Source: NYDaily News

You’ll need a search engine to find the Google logo on the web portal’s homepage Thursday morning.

Instead, Web surfers woke up to find the search engine’s name officially changed to “Topeka” – at least for one day.Google changed its corporate name to 'Topeka' - at least for the duration of April Fool's Day.

The change is purportedly a return gesture to Topeka, Kanasas, whose mayor unofficially renamed the city “Google, Kansas,” for the month of March in an effort to land a spot on Google’s “Fiber for Communities” program. The initiative, launched this year by Google, promises to install new broadband cables in random communities around the United States.

“We’ve been wondering ever since how best to honor that moving gesture,” a spokesperson wrote on the company’s official blog. “Today we are pleased to announce that as of 1AM (Central Daylight Time) April 1st, Google has officially changed our name to Topeka.”

Google, or rather Topeka, announced wide-sweeping changes to the company to go along with the name change: Employees will be referred to as “Topekans” instead of “Googlers” and a push to use “Topeka’ed” as a verb in Web searches.

That Thursday is also April Fool’s Day may be coincidental.

Skeptics may wonder how long the search engine’s name change will last, considering Topeka, Kansas, has already gone back to its old name.

“We are very proud of our city and Topeka is an Indian word which means ‘a good place to grow potatoes,’ Topeka mayor Bill Bunten told CNN in early March. “We’re not going to change that.”

What Twitter’s New Home Page Means For You

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Article Source: Globe and Mail

t can tell you when Ashton Kutcher is getting a haircut, what your best friend had for breakfast, and how many people have preordered the iPad. But popular social networking site Twitter can’t really tell you how it plans to make money. Twitter co-founder and CEO Evan Williams

That was supposed to change Monday when Twitter chief executive officer Evan Williams spoke at the South By Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin, Tex. Mr. Williams was expected to announce an advertising plan for the site to help it secure long-term sources of revenue.

That plan didn’t emerge, the much-hyped keynote speaker lost attendees who trickled out before it was over, and it’s still unclear how Twitter plans to foster a sustainable business model.

What Mr. Williams did announce is a Twitter expansion called @Anywhere. It allows users to log into other websites using their Twitter accounts, so they can tweet a link to something interesting without having to actually go to the Twitter site. Those third-party sites will highlight names and businesses that use Twitter and, when the mouse scrolls over them, a window pops up showing the user’s account and latest activity there.

“Imagine being able to follow a New York Times journalist directly from her byline, tweet about a video without leaving YouTube, and discover new Twitter accounts while visiting the Yahoo! home page,” the blog post announcing the change said.

The service has some big-name launch partners, including Amazon, AdAge, Bing, Digg, eBay, The Huffington Post, MSNBC.com, The New York Times, and YouTube.

“These big partners aren’t who we want to limit it to,” Mr. Williams said. The strategy is to make the service more visible, and useful, everywhere across the Internet.

But Twitter did not provide many details on how it would work, when it would be available, or whether those partners are paying to integrate Twitter features into their websites.

“The company offered a lot of promise and not a lot of product,” technology analyst Carmi Levy said. “That’s why it was received with a big yawn.”

At the end of last year, there were reports that, thanks to deals with Google and Microsoft to make its users’ postings available on search engines, Twitter was actually profitable. But because Twitter is a private company, details are slim and some observers are skeptical.

“It’s all speculation,” Mr. Levy said.

Augie Ray, a social media analyst with Forrester Research, said it may be a good thing Twitter did not move into the realm of advertising with its announcement yesterday.

“Twitter hasn’t shown that much interest in being an ad network … they really see data as being their primary driver,” he said. The more the site can build its presence on the Internet, the easier time it will have collecting data about those habits and selling it to interested companies.

But to gather that data, Twitter needs to expand, he said.

Article Source: Mashable

It’s official: Twitter has surpassed 10 billion tweets. While Gigatweet’s counter is down due to over-traffic., you can tell by the actual tweet ID numbers that we have crossed the magical threshold.

The milestone shows that Twitter’s still growing at a rapid pace: it broke 1 billion tweets in November 2008 and 5 billion tweets just four months ago.

So who was the lucky person that sent out tweet 10 billionth tweet? We’re checking now and will let you know ASAP.

We want to also point out that the 10 billionth tweet doesn’t necessarily correlate to the actual 10 billionth tweet — tweet IDs have been tweaked several times due to technical issues such as Twitpocalypse. Still, it’s close enough, so now it’s time to look to the future and count down towards 20 billion tweets!

Update: Tweet #10 billion apparently belongs to a protected user, as API calls won’t allow us to see that specific status update. Via @timdorr, here is Tweet #9,999,999,999 and tweet #10,000,000,001.

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