X (formerly Twitter) News & Updates

Twitter completes rollout of Activity, @username tabs

Twitter has completed rolling out its new Activity and @username tabs. The new @username tab allows users to see mentions, favorites, retweets and follows of their tweets. The Activity section shows users what the people they follow are doing at the microblogging site. Twitter had announced the new features in August this year.
“You can now see when someone favorites or retweets one of your Tweets. You can also learn which Tweets are most interesting and inspiring to the people you follow,” Twitter had said in its a blog post while announcing the new features. The microblogging site completed the rollout on Monday.
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To see who are retweeting or mentioning their posts, Twitter users can click on “@username” tabs on home pages. The new “activity” tabs allow users to check out what the people they are following doing on the microblogging site. Twitter's activity button is pretty similar to Facebook's ticker, which shows what others are doing on the social networking site.

Source : Digit
 
With 250 Million Tweets A Day, Twitter Plans 'simplicity' Strategy

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With Twitter handling a quarter of a billion tweets a day, company CEO d*ck Costolo said he's focusing on keeping things simple. Speaking at the Web 2.0 Summit on Monday evening, Costolo said he plans on going head-to-head with Facebook and Google+ by focusing on simplicity.
"We're offering simplicity in a world of complexity," he said. "We're trying to edit down ... [ Google ] said they'll compete on features. We're going to compete on simplicity. We're going to simplify our interactions and the way people use our service." He said it will take self-control to focus and edit down instead of cluttering up the micro-blogging service with unnecessary features.

Costolo, who has been CEO for just over a year, said Twitter is booming.

At the beginning of this year, the service was handling about 100 million tweets a day. Now that number has jumped to 250 million tweets a day. Costolo noted that it took Twitter three years and two months to reach its first billion tweets. Now the service hits that number every four days. He also reported that Twitter has 100 million active users, half of whom log in every day.

Costolo said he is excited about the service's mobile usage, and noted that Twitter's mobile use is growing by 40% quarter on quarter. Since the release last week of Apple 's iOS 5, which has deep Twitter integration, daily Twitter signups have tripled, he added.

With all of this success and a year in the company's big chair, Costolo said Twitter is starting to feel like his company. "This is certainly a case where I feel I had to earn the trust of the team," he said. "They trust me as the CEO. They respect me as the CEO. They talk to me as the CEO."

Costolo also made it clear that Twitter is in no hurry to go public , but he does feel pressure to live up to Twitter's US$8 billion market value. "Of course, I feel enormous pressure to live up to the evaluation, but you can't let that be the way you think of the company," he said, adding that Twitter doesn't need the money they'd gain from going public. "We've got more money than we're going to need for a long time, and we're going to be able to scale as we want to scale it. We want to go public when we want to go public and not at the whim of a window."

Costolo got enthusiastic applause when he answered a question about when Twitter will give users access to their old tweets and direct messages. "We have a finite number of search engineers and we have to prioritize the work that they do and we are prioritizing this," he said. "We want to get this to work. We know it's important to people."

source : pc world
 
Twitter To Get 'Tweet' Trademark

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Micro-blogging website Twitter has finally managed to settle a lawsuit which ensures that it has secured the trademark to the word 'tweet'.

The trademark for the term 'tweet' is currently owned by Des Moines-based Twittad, provider of sponsored advertising on Twitter. Twittad even has a tagline that says, "Let your ad meet tweets."The two companies, Twitter and Twittad, have been part of a legal tussle for years where Twitter argued that the term 'tweet' was famous as a Twitter term before Twittad secured the trademark. However, everything has been settled out of court. Whether any money was exchanged is yet unknown.

"We've arrived at a resolution with Twittad that recognizes consistent use of Tweet while supporting the continued success of Twitter ecosystem partners like Twittad,"Twitter spokeswoman Lynn Fox said in a statement to the press.

source : pc world
 
Twitter Analysis Reveals Global Human Moodiness

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Twitter, Facebook and other social media sites are often criticized for encouraging people to share thoughts of little consequence, though social scientists are finding these electronic missives, when assembled en masse and analyzed with big data tools, can offer a wealth of new information about how people think and act. A pair of researchers from Cornell University are the latest to mine social networks for such academic insight. Scott Golder and Michael Macy analyzed 509 million Twitter messages emitted over a period of two years by 2.4 million users across 84 different countries. From this data, they have gleaned that people have the same daily cycle of moods, regardless of their culture or language. A paper summarizing the work, "Diurnal and Seasonal Mood Vary with Work, Sleep, and Daylength Across Diverse Cultures," is in Thursday's issue of the journal Science.

Beyond the immediate results, the work points to a possible new path in academic research, that of mining social networks for academic insight, the researchers said. "The paper illustrates the opportunities for doing social and behavioral science in a new way," Macy said. "The growing tendency for human beings all over the globe to interact with one another using digital devices opens opportunities for research that were unimaginable even five years ago". "Far from seeing conversations as mundane and useless, we see value in the fact that they are real-time, time-stamped messages produced by people on the spot for sharing with their friends," Golder added.

The researchers used Twitter's API (application programming interface) to gather the messages. They set up a six-node cluster to extract the data, which arrived packaged in XML, and converted the results into flat files. They then used a 55-node Hadoop cluster, running at the Cornell University Center for Advanced Computing, to analyze the dataset. The analysis tool they used, Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count, links specific words to various positive and negative moods. Messages that might include words such as "awesome," "fantastic" or "pretty" could indicate a positive state, whereas words like "remorse," "abandonment," "fear" or "fury" indicate a negative state of some sort.

The results showed people tend to be more chirpy in the morning and during weekends. The messages revealed that they wake up happy and slowly grow more disgruntled and sour as the day goes on, though their affect usually rebounds in the evening. This behavior happens on both weekdays and weekends, though the weekend tweets usually start about two hours later than the weekday ones, perhaps because people are sleeping in. Even in countries where the weekend is not Saturday and Sunday (in the United Arab Emirates, for instance, people work Sunday through Thursday), these patterns were evident.

While the findings may seem obvious, the Cornell work is actually the first full-scale study to show this behavior in empirical form, the researchers contend. Twitter proved valuable in this study because it captures the affect of the individual in real time, Golder said. Typically, clinical studies are done either by bringing subjects to a lab and watching their behaviors -- an unnatural environment for studying day-to-day activities -- or surveying them, an approach limited by fallibility of the subjects' memories. Also, some subjects "are just not very good at being aware of what their feelings are," Golder said. "It's a big advantage to access people's words in a setting that is natural and spontaneous."

The work, funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation, was done under a research group led by Macy, which combines sociologists and computer scientists to pursue computer-assisted social science research projects. Golder's background is in linguistics and computer science. Prior to joining Cornell, he worked as a research scientist for Hewlett-Packard. The project "required some engineering know-how, and that will be something that will have to be more and more important for empiric social sciences," he said.

Other parties have also been investigating this new technique of analyzing human activities through the quantitative analysis of their written output, a practice some scholars call culturonomics. In 2010, Google Labs launched a text analysis tool that allows researchers to execute numerical text analysis against Google's massive store of digitized books, which dates back centuries. This week, Google incorporated the tool, called NGram Viewer, directly into its Google Books service.

Also this week, Twitter has released the source code for its Storm stream processing engine, data analysis software that should help researchers and other users analyze multiple Twitter feeds as they are updated.

source : pc world
 
Twitter helping TV channels to help stay with trends

http://www.newstrackindia.com/newsdetails/253509
 
new tweet and follow button by twitter

twitter has changed its tweet and follow buttons yesterday,insted of images they have used .css style buttons now just like fb... :em
 
RE: new tweet and follow button by twitter

What do mean by your this post? ''No one can copy it? :dodgy ''

Do you know what is security realted thing in it? :huh
 
RE: new tweet and follow button by twitter

What is security related fact in change of buttons and what special about not being able to copy it?? @Sushanshu :huh
 
RE: new tweet and follow button by twitter

in fact we can copy by css
but security increasing copyright the by img
 
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