On 9 Dec 2008, at 18:04, Amir Michail wrote:
On Tue, Dec 9, 2008 at 11:32 AM, jstrellner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

To me, this sounds like MLM, based off of twitter, just slightly
modified.  If you want to go this route, why not just say, "if you
follow me, I'll follow you and we'll both get higher numbers. Maybe
you'll like what I have to say too."

How do you do this without spamming a huge number of people?  Why do
you think many people would look at your twitter page to read such a
message?

In my experience the best way to get new followers is not to ask for them, either directly or through using any service with the sole purpose of allowing you to pimp yourself as worth following. If you're worth following people will follow. It's then up to you whether you reciprocate or not. Personally I look their last few pages and base my decision on that. If I'm not interested in that then there's no value in my following them.

But that's just the way I see it.

-Stut

--
http://stut.net/
http://twitter.com/stut


Honestly though, this completely misses the whole point of Twitter.

On Dec 8, 7:51 pm, "Amir Michail" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, Dec 8, 2008 at 10:31 PM, Waitman Gobble <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Well, if you're like me you don't really need any cheerleaders to
fluff you up and get you going. I mean they're nice and all, but
stubborn persistence regardless.

And besides, we'd not have much of this stuff if it weren't for some renegades with stubborn idears. You know, the Internet Cowboys. Guys who would crowbar their ways onto the rooftops of bank hi-rises just
to set up satellite dishes and offer wireless internet when most
people never even heard of broadband. Or rent a back hoe and chaw
through public streets without permit to run copper. Back in the
1990's. Those types. Where would we be now?

The thing I'm missing in your proposal - I can't see the nookie. I
mean, are users getting a higher quality of selection of tweets
because you do the Turing exam? Or are they going to get more
followers because you have a pool of twitters at the other end waiting
for them? (because of the quality of feed).

Suppose you have two twitter users who are each working on a web 2.0
startup and would like to increase the number of their twitter
followers to better their chances of startup success.

They could go to this service to increase their followers.

So in using this service, they find each other.  Even though they
don't necessarily want to increase the number of people they follow,
they might discover cool tweets that they would like to see anyway.

And so they end up following each other, even though it was not their
intent to follow more people.

Amir





Not cutting, just trying to understand.

Waitman

On Dec 8, 7:11 pm, "Amir Michail" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, Dec 8, 2008 at 9:20 PM, Waitman Gobble <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
...

Anyways, back to the original topic.

I don't understand WHERE these "Them" are going to submit. (re:
original post). I guess that's what I'm missing.

Waitman

At the service using the twitter API that I'm thinking of building. I didn't realize this idea was so difficult to understand though. Maybe
I shouldn't even try...

Amir

On Dec 8, 5:54 pm, Cameron Kaiser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
It's because people who are new, or considered new due to few posts, are
automatically put in the moderation queue.
spam, which I'm sure

--http://b4utweet.comhttp://chatbotgame.comhttp://numbrosia.comhttp ://t...

--http://b4utweet.comhttp://chatbotgame.comhttp:// numbrosia.comhttp://twitter.com/amichail





--
http://b4utweet.com
http://chatbotgame.com
http://numbrosia.com
http://twitter.com/amichail

Reply via email to