Friday, February 29, 2008 | By Biz Stone (@biz) [21:14 UTC]
Wordy Birdie is a game that works within Twitter. The creator, Dan Grigsby describes it as “part buzzword bingo, part drinking game.” You earn points by predicting what words people you follow will use in their updates.
Thursday, February 28, 2008 | By Biz Stone (@biz) [04:10 UTC]
Update: We were testing a new application server tonight that didn’t work right so we rolled it back. Lots of folks saw an error page while we were fixing the bug—which is a bummer.
Some folks experienced a more dramatic error which had them accidentally updating other people’s Twitter—this is a more serious issue which crosses into the realm of security. We took this very seriously, acted quickly, and learned from our mistake.
Monday, February 25, 2008 | By Biz Stone (@biz) [21:28 UTC]
Los grandes eventos como el Súpermartes en Estados Unidos generan muchas conversaciones en Twitter. Es fácil seguir a otros usuarios en Twitter, y también es fácil ver en Twitter la “gran foto”, el conjunto de conversaciones generadas alrededor de un evento, para colocar los eventos históricos en perspectiva.
Thursday, February 21, 2008 | By Biz Stone (@biz) [19:35 UTC]
This new Twitter application called StrawPoll is really neat. Follow strawpoll on Twitter and every day around 8am EST it will ask you a simple question. Reply with your answer and the pretty graph on the front page will get updated so you can see the results of everyone who is participating.
Thursday, February 21, 2008 | By Biz Stone (@biz) [19:03 UTC]
Yes, you can follow SnoopDogg on Twitter. More importantly, you can grab this new Twitter Badge that translates you and your friends updates into Snoop speak. And just in time too—it was getting tiresome having to do all that translation manually. Read more...
Thursday, February 21, 2008 | By Biz Stone (@biz) [02:03 UTC]
Click image to see bigger graph
Twitter’s traffic comes from SMS, Instant Message, Mobile Web, and all those wonderful API projects out there. However, we also have good old-fashioned web traffic. 60% of our web traffic comes from outside the United States and this chart shows the top ten non-US sources.