High-bandwidth Twitter Tools

I follow 702 people and its a lot of information to process. Raven Zachary asked me the criteria I use to follow people. Its pretty simple; if you’re interesting and I’ve found you, I let serendipity reign and follow. I’ve also very recently taken to following every person I can find in Portland, OR (more on that in a moment).

Okay great, now I’m following all of these people; how do you sort through it all? The first tool I use is Tweetscan which is a real-time Twitter search engine. Yes, its really real-time. I can search for my name and see who has tried to @message me. I can also look up interesting memes like Heath Ledger and OpenID. My favorite feature is the email alerts for specific search strings delivered to you daily. Again, I do this for my username to make sure I didn’t miss something directed at me and then can reply accordingly.

Now a lot of these features can be done with Twitter’s mobile features but honestly, I don’t use SMS with Twitter (thankfully I’m a faithful m.twitter.com user) and with the new limit on 250 SMS messages, it wouldn’t make sense anyways.

Another application I use to find what’s what in my area is Twitterwhere (the other one). This is a cool application written by Matt King that gives you tweets within a certain mileage of your listed location in Twitter. There are RSS feeds along with a slick Adobe AIR app to go along with it. I’ve used this to stalk … err … find all of the people I’ve been following in Portland. It was also the application that got me thinking about starting pulseofpdx.com.

About

This is the blog of Scott Kveton, digital identity promoter, open source contributor, avid gardener, passionate pizza maker, loving husband and proud father. Read More ...

Also Known As

Once or twice in my life people have mis-spelled my name (I know, its a shocker) ... you may have seen my lastname appear as any or all of the following:

Kverton • Kvelton • Keaton
Rueton • Kreton • Kventon
Kevton • Kevin • Smith (true story)
Kueton• Kvetan• Keveton


    Interesting. Tell us more about how you use Tweetscan. Is it manually, where you just go search on hot topics, or do you use the RSS feeds, or ??

    If you use the feeds, what’s the typical delay between a Tweet being published and the item showing up in the feed?

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