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commented on Jeff Brunelle's clip
Cool changes coming to Twitter Search
commented on Jeff Brunelle's clip
Cool changes coming to Twitter Search

HarperCollins Wants to Be Your Friend

Amplifyd from www.observer.com
“I get a lot of, ‘Can you tell me about the Internet?’ ‘Do you think we need to Twitter?’ ‘Do I need to blog?’ I get a lot of that—a lot, a lot, a lot of that. They don’t believe that it’ll work, they don’t believe that you have to do it. And to me it’s like, ‘Don’t you see the sky is blue?’”
Ms. Stier is among the most visible and energetic believers in the idea that publishers must stop relying on critics, journalists and talk show hosts for coverage, and instead start finding creative ways of reaching readers directly through emerging social media tools like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, etc.
“I’ve been running down the halls screaming ‘fire’ for a couple of years now, and you know, I feel like it’s only recently that people are starting to hear me,” Ms. Stier said. Read more at www.observer.com
 

Stier is onto something - let’s hope her colleagues start listening more. Glue and AB Meta are going to be huge assets to the publishing industry as well. Every author/publisher should get on Glue and start connecting with readers.

Cool changes coming to Twitter Search

Amplifyd from news.cnet.com
Twitter Search, which currently searches only the text of Twitter posts, will soon begin to crawl the links included in tweets and begin to index the content of those pages.

This will make Twitter Search a much more complete index of what’s happening in real time on the Web, and make it an even more credible competitor to Google Search for people who are looking for very timely content.

Twitter engineers noticed that the word “earthquake” had suddenly started trending up. They didn’t know where the earthquake was. Several seconds later, their building started to shake. The earthquake had been in Morgan Hill, 60 miles south of San Francisco, and the tweets about the shaker reached the office faster than the seismic waves themselves. Read more at news.cnet.com
 

Behold the power of Twitter.