The history of Twitter, 140 characters at a time.
HISTORY
Twitter is the brainchild of a programmers who worked at the podcasting company Odeo Inc. in San Francisco.
They were looking for a way to send text on their cellphones and a way to reinvent a dying company.
On March 21, 2006, @Jack sent the first tweet: "just setting up my twttr."
THAT NAME
The name Twitter was inspired by Flickr, a photo-sharing service. Other names considered: FriendStalker and Dodgeball.
The dictionary definition of twitter is "a short burst of inconsequential information."
A perfect name, said @Jack because "that's exactly what the product was."
TWITTER TODAY
Almost 200 million users worldwide. About 460,000 new Twitter accounts are opened daily.
More than 140 million tweets are sent daily. That's one billion weekly.
In 2008, Twitter had eight employees; today it has more than 400. And they're hiring (twitter.com/jobs)
WHY 140 CHARACTERS?
At the heart of Twitter are small bursts of information called tweets.Each tweet is 140 characters in length, maximum.
Initially, there was no limit to message length. When it went public, the 140 character limit was adopted.
Why? Because 160 characters was the SMS carrier limit and the founders wanted to leave room for a username.
Struggling with brevity? You can purchase 140 Characters: A Style Guide for the Short Form by @Dom.
HOW TWITTER MAKES MONEY
Twitter lists its revenues at a modest $150-million annually. It is a private company so the sources of revenue are unclear.
Twitter also licenses its stream of tweets to Microsoft, Google and Yahoo.
There are constant rumours that Twitter will be purchases by Facebook or Google. It could also go public like LinkedIn.
There are constant rumours that Twitter will be purchases by Facebook or Google. It could also go public like LinkedIn.
Twitter is said to be worth more than $4.5-billion. The value comes from its potential to exploit its base of hundreds of millions of users.
Twitter could sell traditional ads (not likely) and to start charging for premium accounts that push business to their sites (very likely).
HOW TWITTER HAS CHANGED THE MEDIA
Increasingly, news stories that arise - a tsunami, a plane crash, the score of a hockey game, the latest Charlie Sheen gossip - arrive in tweets from people we follow on Twitter.
This allows everyone to essentially create their own newspaper or newscast, and to do so instantaneously.
HOW TWITTER HAS CHANGED POLITICS
Social media and microblogging like Twitter has changed political communication profoundly.
Political messages used to be controlled by a handful of powerful gatekeepers. Now the messengers, and hence the messages, are more diffuse and diverse.
In Canada, Industry Minister Tony Clement is one of the most prolific and popular Twitterers.
HOW TWITTER HAS CHANGED BUSINESS
Beyond its social function, Twitter is used increasingly by business to communicate with employees and customers.
Business can communicate real-time message to the customers they want to reach.
Conversely, when customers are unhappy with a product or service, they can spread the word quickly - and do damage - with a few tweets.
MOST FOLLOWED
Lady Gaga (@ladygaga): 8.9 million followers
Justin Bieber (@justin bieber): 8.2 million
Barack Obama (@BarackObama): 7.0 million
Kim Kardashian (@KimKardashian): 6.8 million
CANADA'S MOST FOLLOWED
Jeremy Jack Bieber (@LordBieber): 185,000 followers (yes, he's Justin Bieber's dad)
Gemstar (@Gemstars): virtual art gallery, 182,500
James Rivers (@JamesRivers): expert on Twitter marketing, 105,000
Sharon Hayes (@SharonHayes): e-entrepreneur, 104,000
Jaydon Wale (@jeyounit11): self-described "YouTube legend," 101,000
"The qualities that make Twitter seem inane and half-baked are what makes it so powerful" -Harvard law professor Jonathan Zittrain
"Who ever said things have to be useful?" -Twitter co-founder Evan Williams
"This is what the naysayers fail to understand: it's just as easy to use Twitter to spread the word about a brilliant 10,000-word New Yorker article as it is to spread the word about your Lucky Charms habit." -Steven Johnson, author of The Invention of Air
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