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I've also taken advantage of the RSS feed for people I want to follow the most. That way, I can do a quick sweep of their tweets at another time if I want to make sure I don't miss something. That too, can be more of a bulk-delete thing, but it affords me the opportunity to quickly catch up if I want to.
Whenever someone starts following me, I check their twitter page via the notification. If they have a website, I also check that out. If they have similar interests, or have similar sensibilities then I add them as a friend to follow. Otherwise, I just leave them be.
Of the 100 people I follow, only about 30-40 tweet daily or semi daily, so I don't get overloaded with information. This really is the way to go. Anyone like iJustine that is following 3000+ people is just doing it as a popularity contest. You might as well follow the public feed. There's just no point.
I'm probably a little more generous than he (I certainly don't have a cap at 100) but I only add those I find really interesting. And, I only get notifications on some of them.
...and I'm using Tweet bar to keep up with my business Twitter account and Meebo IM to keep up with my personal one.
I did a major 'cleanse' a month or so ago and it has seemed to help me focus my Twitter stream and get what I want out of Twitter.
/kff
I use TwitterMail to catch replies, and I have GoogleTalk IM set up to receive direct messages. I also have direct messages emailed to me.
All email related to Twitter passes through a GMail filter, skipping the Inbox, and labeled with something like "Twitter" or "bacn".
I subscribe to a couple of RSS feeds via Terraminds.com, Twitterwhere, and - maybe (can't remember) - Yahoo! Pipes.
I set up keyword tracking on Twitter, but it only appears to be working if you have phone notifications on.
It works for me for now. As always, your use of social media may vary, and that's okay.
If there is a friend I am worried about I may click on their page to see if things are better or if the wheels have fallen off and then send and encouraging DM.
Good question, and no easy answer. My attention buffer fills quickly, so I take a "week at the beach" approach--jump in 2-3 times a day for refreshment. If I'm interested in a certain thread I'll backtrack it. Otherwise, I leave it to the Fates that important stuff will be sticky enough to get on my radar--how's that for a mixed metaphor! x/D.
Twitter is basically a broken chat model. Except in chat , the conversation can be segregated into rooms and Twitter and Facebook can't.
The very premise of Twitter is broken.
Over the past 1-1/2 years people have been using it for much more than that.
It sure has been interesting to see it evolve.
The biggest thing thus far for me is that once I follow it's hard for me to unfollow someone because I usually find profoundly interesting things from MOST of the people I follow. Now, I have done a mass unfollow in one setting and turned off some people that I didn't have a real conversation with. I had to because it was important to me to hear the people that I do have conversations going with.
Ged, that's it exactly. It's an overload, which isn't USEFUL to anyone. Not to those I follow or those I read. The issue though to me, is that while Twitter didn't expect to get this big, having a way to organize information and staying organized from the start is the BEST way to start any venture. I wish that they could give us something to tag users with.
This really isn't about popularity to me. I genuinely like reading those I am following.
Jeff -
I would agree with you but I'm seeing some folks use Twitter for more important communications and assuming that I am reading. I'm not always, especially when traveling. You have to DM me to get my attention if I'm away from my computer.
Lori, Daniel,
I think those systems are great, but a lot of work that I don't have a lot of time to follow. I love Twhirl. I don't love missing tweets. I need something reliable and at this point it looks like unfollowing is the only way to partly ensure that.
Creating two accounts with two different clients running to keep up with the accounts takes up more of my time rather than less and it uses Twitter's servers lots more.
Especially I'm liking Ann's approach, but I definitely need to come to terms with the solution Daniel mentioned. My mileage varies from other's.
This is what it boils down to for each of us, isn't it?.
Michael, I agree, there are some problems with Twitter and I just hope that they can resolve them so that some point in the future I can follow everyone I want in a way that doesn't subtract from participating.