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Is Twitter life altering? Time thinks so

2 comments, Latest by Rich Cherecwich

Time magazine has hopped onto the Twitter bandwagon, and in grand fashion -- a recent article from the staid news magazine is boldly titled "How Twitter will change the way we live."

The article, written by Steven Johnson of outside.in, describes the microblogging platform with the kind of hyperbolized language that would make a grad student blush  ("…it was built entirely out of 140-character messages, but the sum total of those tweets added up to something truly substantive, like a suspension bridge made of pebbles"), but it's well worth a read.

Will Twitter's 140-character status update change the way we live? Hardly.

Johnson points out that Twitter is seemingly letting us monitor exactly what people are talking about at this very moment on a national level, but the main argument for Twitter's legacy is the way users and outside developers have shaped the product. As Johnson puts it, the plethora of third-party apps and websites utilizing Twitter are like "inventing a toaster oven and then looking around a year later and seeing that your customers have of their own accord figured out a way to turn it into a microwave."

Twitter will undoubtedly fizzle at some point, just like internet sensations AOL, Yahoo, Friendster, and MySpace all have. And as marketers continue to find ways to use the tool for their needs, Time's thesis -- that "end-user innovation" is the most important factor -- may be worth considering.

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Greg Padley's headshot

Jun 05, 2009 at 11:48 AM EST

By Greg Padley

Interesting, thanks Rich. A thought on your line "Twitter will undoubedly fizzle at some point, just like AOL, Yahoo, Friendster, and MySpace all have." I don't see this as a "fizzle." I see each one of these as one piece in an online evolution of sorts. Would we have Yahoo groups without AOL coming before it? Would we have had MySpace without Friendster? Would we have twitter without blogging? These are all interconnected, several things leading to "the next big thing." Twitter may evolve into something else or become extinct as other ideas built on those before it emerge. http://5691gerg.com/?p=181

Rich Cherecwich's headshot

Jun 05, 2009 at 01:47 PM EST

By Rich Cherecwich

I think you're absolutely right Greg. The popularity of all those online services has waned considerably, but each played an important role in shaping and inspiring all the web tools we use today.

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