Sunday, August 30, 2009

Twitter Glossary: Twitter Lingo Explained For The Utterly Confused

Twitter Glossary: Twitter Lingo Explained For The Utterly Confused: "

twitter-glossary-terms


Follow me on Twitter | ReTweet this post


What are all those confusing little words you come across in every other tweet? Read on for answers.


Twitter is becoming a culture in itself. Spawning new words, and creating new concepts around its lingo.


Many of us get confused when we first join Twitter and are bombarded with the inside mumbo-jumbo. This post is meant to clear up some of those words. The big ones actually, that everyone else seems to know except you!


Let’s start with the all so common Tweet.


Tweet


Whatever you post at Twitter is a tweet (and thank god not a twit).


RT or ReTweet


There’s already a big fat post on Blogging Bits that explains what ReTweet is and why and how you should use it. But I’ll summarize it here again for those of you who can’t be arsed to read the whole post.


ReTweet is a quoted tweet, a repost. You ReTweet when you quote someone else’s tweet in your tweet.


That’s how most tweeple (oops.. people) use it:


RT @originalposter this is a quoted tweet — this is your comment


Where RT stands for ReTweet, @originalposter is the guy or girl you’re quoting, the following text is the quoted tweet, and the text after dashes is your comments (comments are optional).


#Hashtags


Hashtags are a way to tag your tweets. They are keywords you use to put your tweet in certain topic.


You usually use hashtags when tracking a popular topic. Like if you’re giving updates on FOWD conference, you’ll use the tag #FOWD in your update tweets.


Use hashtags at the end of a tweet, or make a hashtag out of any word inside the tweet to save space (for example: I’m at #FOWD meeting jolly good folks).


DM


DM stands for direct message.


Twitter is all about saying everything in public timeline, but there are occasions when you want to send some a private message. That’s when you use a DM.


Method 1: If you want to send a @Friend a direct message, type it like this:


D Friend This is the message.


D at start is to ensure this is a private message. Friend is the Twitter ID of of the person you’re sending a DM, and the rest is your message.


NOTE: Always use D and not DM at the start of a direct message or it’ll end up in public timeline.


Method 2: Switch to “Direct Messages” tab on your Twitter page, select a person from the drop down menu, enter your message in the input box, and hit the send button.


Tweeps / Tweeple


The peeps or people on Twitter of course.


Twitterverse / Twitterville


Everyone at Twitter. The Twitter community.


Twitterati


The big guys at Twitter. Those with more followers than you can count in your lifetime.


Tword


Any word prefixed by Tw to make it more compatible with Twitter.


———————————


There are a lot more words with TW added at the start, and many more being coined everyday, so it’d be a waste of time and energy to document them all here.


Though you must have gotten a pretty good idea of how a Tword works by now, and you should be able to decipher any new words encountered from now on.


Any other popular Twitter words/terms I have missed? Let me know in the comments.


Link Code: d1928 - © Blogging Bits | Blog writing, marketing, and design




"

Collaborate on Picasa Web Albums

Collaborate on Picasa Web Albums: "Posted by Thomas Kang, Software Engineer

After a recent trip to Yosemite, I was frustrated to see my traveling companions share their photos in three different online albums on three different photo-sharing sites. What we really needed was a single album to which everyone could add their photos. Google Docs makes collaborating on documents easy. Why not try a similar idea with photos? Starting today, every album on Picasa Web Albums is potentially collaborative: multiple people can add pictures to the same album.

To make an album collaborative, sign in to Picasa Web Albums and add contributors. Just click the 'Share' button, add contributors, and
leave the 'Let people I share with contribute photos' checkbox selected.


You can also manage access for contributors you've added to the 'Shared with' list by toggling the 'plus' icon next to their name – when the plus icon is green they can add photos.



Contributors will need to log in to Picasa Web Albums with their Google Account to add photos. When they visit your collaborative album, they just need to click the 'Add Photos' button to start uploading.


Contributors' photos will be attributed to them, and they can rotate, delete, or add captions to the pictures they've uploaded.

A few limitations worth noting: contributors won't be able to upload to collaborative albums from the Picasa software. Also, if you're contributing to an album using Internet Explorer, for now you will only be able to upload five photos at a time. While this limit is standard for other browsers, we're already working to allow easier collaborative uploads for Internet Explorer.

As always, we'd love to hear your feedback in our help forum.

Update (8:25 PM, August 20): We've fixed the issue with Internet Explorer, so contributors using IE can now upload more than five photos at a time to a collaborative album. Learn more.


"