First Impressions: Twitter

I’ve known about Twitter, Pownce, and other “microblogging” services for a while now, but honestly I’ve never felt the need to use them. I don’t even blog as much as I should, so I felt that I would never use a microblogging service.

I signed up for a Twitter account several months ago, and never really used it. I would login and update it from the website maybe once a month… not that accurate a description of what I’m up to.

Then I went to SXSW, and I found the real beauty behind Twitter. It seemed like everyone at SXSW was Twittering, and they were using it to keep up with all their friends, the conference and post back to everyone back home as to their status.

It was especially important at night, when you could get an invite to a semi-private party simply by Twitter. Or you could get valuable information in a message, like that some rock star just crashed a party.

After Twittering a good bit at SXSW, I decided it did have some actual benefits and I would do my best to give it a shot. Since I’ve been back, I honestly haven’t updated it that often, but then again I haven’t been up to much either.

I have, however, really enjoyed following all my friends on Twitter — especially the people I met in Austin.

I think my hangup with Twitter was because I was trying to use it from my dekstop. Once I was separated from my computer, and used Twitter from my iPhone I found its true potential. Keep up with people on the road, much quicker than using email (which isn’t even an option for most people who don’t have a smartphone), and much cheaper than mass texting.

I’ll be giving Twitter a real trial over the next couple of months to see if it fits my lifestyle. We’ll see.

SXSW, My Review

I’m back from Austin and while I definitely have enough catchup work to keep me busy, I thought I’d post a quick review since it was my first time at the conference.

First, I finally got to meet a lot of people in person that I’ve known for years… Patrick O’Keefe, Chrispian Burks, Jeremy Wright, Aaron Brazell, Stephan Segraves and more. It was great hanging out with you guys.

This was my first trip to Austin and my first SXSW conference. I had a great time, and wish I could have stayed for the whole week, but we stayed only for the Interactive portion. I learned one thing almost immediately — SXSW has two worlds — the panels and conference during the day and the parties and networking events at night. I’ll give a brief review of each.

The SXSW Conference and Expo

All of the panels and discussions were between 30 minutes and 1 hour long. It seemed like in many of the discussions we were really just getting started and it was over. In a way, this is good because it gets you thinking about a subject and asking yourself questions, and leaves you to finish on your own. Hopefully you go back with some unanswered questions and continue the discussion online and with colleagues back home.

The layout of the convention center made it difficult to get from one room to another. Several times we just could not physically make it to another panel in time because it required walking clear across the convention center (which was big).

The trade show itself was a bit smaller than I expected. Since it is an Interactive, Film and Music conference I expected to see a fairly large trade show, maybe divided into sections for each. The exhibitors had fairly small booths and were giving out schwag like t-shirts, pins, stickers, etc. I saw companies like O’Reilly, Opera, Mapquest, Google, and Yahoo. A few people I expected to see but didn’t: Mozilla/Firefox, Microsoft, Apple.

Overall it was very organized and the panels discussed interesting topics related to our industry. I learned a good bit and enjoyed bumping into interesting people on the show floor.

The Parties and Networking Events

I was fortunate to know a good number of people going to Austin for SXSW, many whom I have never met in person. Several of us got together Friday night to meet and have dinner, and had some discussions on industry topics and generally just hang out.

Every night after that it seems there was a party or networking event planned that seemed interesting. There were a few blog-specific events that I enjoyed in particular, including the Chitika/ProBlogger Beer Bus and the b5media Blog Network Camp. I learned a lot about blogging and met some great people.

I realized quickly that the sessions and panels are great but they just spark your creativity and get your wheels turning. It’s the Austin night life that really makes SXSW what it is. I had a great time at SXSW and can’t wait for next year.

My “Start Menu” isn’t a menu!

My friend Patrick wants to know what my start menu looks like.

Okay, I haven’t had a “Start Menu” in a really long time. When I switched back to Mac I thought I would need one. I sure didn’t want to have to open my Applications folder every time I needed to launch an application.

Soon after moving back to Mac, I discovered Quicksilver, an amazing utility. In just a few clicks on my keyboard (no mouse needed) I can open any program, compose an email, lower my volume, advance to a new track, see a contact’s phone number, search inside my files, print a file, and many more useful functions.

All without even reaching for my mouse.

Even after Apple’s Spotlight has gotten more functionality with 10.5 Leopard, I still use Quicksilver constantly throughout the day.

My Macworld Keynote Predictions Came True (mostly)

While most of my Macworld Keynote predictions came true, I have to say that I didn’t quite expect to see a new AppleTV or multi-touch in the new MacBook Air. I think overall it was a good keynote and the announcements were good. Apple and Steve knew they couldn’t top last year’s (iPhone) keynote so they didn’t even try.

I think the MacBook Air is a niche product… I mean, I’d love to have one, but I won’t be getting one. If I had a nice desktop machine and traveled a lot, I’d probably think about it.

The iPhone updates were welcome and I was downloading them as soon as they were available. I can’t wait to get my hands on the SDK next month.

The video rentals and AppleTV announcement was welcomed too. I don’t plan on renting videos through Apple when I can get them from NetFlix and keep them as long as I want (and watch them multiple times) but I think I might just get an AppleTV now that the price has dropped. We’ve been eyeing them for a few months now anyway.

Overall, it was a pretty good year. Knowing that they’ve already announced changes to the xServe and Mac Pro lines and there will likely be a 16 GB iPhone with 3G sometime in 2008, I think it will be a solid year for Apple.

MacWorld Expo

The MacWorld Expo starts tomorrow. The Keynote, delivered by none other than Steve Jobs, is Tuesday at 9AM Pacific time. I’m not able to attend the expo (I’m already doing a lot of traveling the next three months) so I’ll be forced to be reading some blogs to get my updates as the keynote unfolds.

I’m hoping for an ultra-portable MacBook Pro, movie rentals in iTunes, and an iPhone software update. I’d love to see a 3G iPhone with 16 GB of memory, but even if it’s announced, it probably won’t be available for some months to come.

But I will be happy, rather ecstatic, if they just announce the iPhone SDK and post details immediately. After getting a new iPhone (due to my wife dropping hers) I was locked in to 1.1.2, so I can’t run AppTapp or any third-party apps. The SDK, though it will probably limit 3rd party apps somewhat, would be my dream announcement.