Category Archives: Twitter

TypePad users: How to Re-Enable Twitter Sharing After the OAuth Change

As a TypePad user, I discovered today that any new posts I made on this blog or Disruptive Telephony were NOT being shared on Twitter after I published them.  It turns out to be that the connection to my Twitter account needed to be fixed… presumably related to Twitter’s OAuth authentication change.  I’m guessing that I set up the linkage to my Twitter account back when TypePad first provided the capability – and undoubtedly provided my Twitter account name and password.  That kind of authentication to Twitter was no longer allowed as of August 31st.

If you find yourself in this same situation, here’s what you need to do.  First, go into your overall TypePad account settings and go to the “Other Accounts” page.  If you have a problem, you’ll see some text in red that says something like “Action Required” (unfortunately I didn’t take a screenshot of it) in the area shown in this screenshot next to your Twitter account name:

typepadotheraccounts.jpg

If you do not see any red text, and just see green checkmarks like are in the screenshot, you are all set – your Twitter sharing should be working perfectly fine.

If you do see the red text, it’s a click-able link that will take you to the Twitter OAuth authentication page where you can approve TypePad’s access to your Twitter account.

Next, you need to go to EACH of your blogs where you want to share your posts out to Twitter and check the box next to your Twitter account again.  It seems that when your Twitter account is disconnected, the connection is removed from each of your blogs.

To get to the Sharing screen shown in the screenshot below, you need to go into the Dashboard for each blog, click on the “Settings” tab on the top and then the “Sharing” tab on the left side. Then you can check off that you want to share posts on Twitter:

twittersharing.jpg

Unfortunately I found you do have to do it for every blog that you have on TypePad. Not a huge deal for me, since only 4 of my blogs are on TypePad, but it could be more of a pain for others.  In the end, though, all my blogs are now once again sharing blog posts out to Twitter.

Hope this helps some of you…


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How to create an automated Twitter self-service “RSVP” app using Tropo.com

twitterlogo-shadow.jpgDo you want an application that lets your customers interact with you via Twitter – but to do so via “self-service”? i.e. without a person having to help them? What if you wanted to make it so that people could RSVP for an event via Twitter and receive an automated acknowledgement?

That’s exactly the type of app a colleague of mine wrote about in this recent post: Linking to Twitter using Javascript & Tropo Scripting. He shows how you can create an app like this using the Tropo.com cloud communications service and walks you through step-by-step what you need to do.

The appropriate automation and scaling of your Twitter usage is a topic near and dear to me… I’ve written about it myself over on the Tropo blog with topics like “creating a ‘night service’ for your Twitter account.” (And yes, I do want to continue the series, since it’s not really a “series” if I only wrote Part 1!) It’s a topic I know I’ll keep returning to.

Anyway, check out Justin’s article… and Tropo accounts are free, so you can try it out yourself!


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Mashable: Hilarious parody “Twitter Movie” trailer

Saw this article in Mashable and just did have to share it here… for those of us who have been involved with Twitter since its early days, it is fun to laugh at some of the more inane aspects of the service. Enjoy:

Kudos to the team who put this together!


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How do you scale your company’s Twitter interaction? Automation can help…

twitterlogo.jpgIf you are successful in establishing Twitter as a channel to interact with your customers… for customer support, service, general inquiries, whatever… if it really works and customers start to view Twitter as a regular channel to contact you on… how do you scale your support of Twitter?

That’s one of the questions that has intrigued me ever since I started using Twitter back in late 2006 and have watched the adoption by companies and organizations. Typically Twitter usage at companies starts out with a couple of people… if it’s successful, though, what do you do when those people go home at night? Have them keep checking? Wait to respond until the next day? What if they want to go on vacation?

If you are Comcast, you might hire a whole team of people (they did). This piece earlier this month talked about how Staples has grown their “Twitter reps” to 20.

If you have a large call center, odds are that there are modules now that let you connect Twitter directly into your contact center software. Ditto your CRM software… SalesForce.com has a component you can add, as do many of the other solutions out there.

Given that I work for Voxeo and we provide a platform to help companies connect their customers to information as quickly as possible, I’ve been interested to see how we could connect Twitter into what we call “Unified Self-Service” … essentially the idea that you can have one application interacting with customers across multiple channels.

Back in March, we add Twitter support to our Tropo.com cloud communications service and I have been writing a series of blog posts about using Twitter and Tropo. As part of that, I am starting a series around how to use a Tropo application to help you scale your use of Twitter. Part 1 is now up:

Scaling Your Twitter Support, Part 1: Adding a “Night Service” via Tropo.com

I discuss there how you can add an automated agent to a Twitter account and set it up to be active during certain times. Next up I’m planning to write a bit about how you could write an app to augment a human responding to tweets. Stay tuned…

P.S. And naturally if you want to try this out yourself you can head on over to Tropo.com and set yourself up with a free developer account… copy/paste the code from my blog post and you’re off and running…


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Best Twitter Lists ever…. (from Christopher Penn)

I love it when people find the humorous side to new features that are getting over-hyped in the social media space right now… from Mr. Penn comes:

http://twitter.com/cspenn/lists

cspenn-twitter-lists-1.jpg

As he noted in a tweet, you do not want to be on them… 🙂


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Why did CNN need to fake Sarah Palin’s new Twitter page?

UPDATE: CNN’s post now includes this text:

UPDATE (Friday): A few hours after Palin changed her Twitter account name, she switched it back to @AKGovSarahPalin. @SarahPalinUSA is now a new separate account altogether. CNN e-mailed a Palin representative seeking comment, but has not yet heard back.

So apparently the screenshot was in fact legit, only that the account was later changed back between the time CNN started writing and then published their post.


Want to know why people don’t “trust” the mainstream media? Here’s a classic example pointed out by C.C. Chapman (and he later posted a screenshot). In his CNN article, Eric Huhn writes about how Sarah Palin has changed her Twitter ID from AKGovSarahPalin to SarahPalinUSA and accompanies it with a “screenshot” of the page:

cnnfaketwitterpage.jpg

Here’s the problem:

It’s a fake.

Here is Palin’s existing AKGovSarahPalin page, that looks basically like the one pictured:

akgovsarahpalin.jpg

Here is her (purported) new SarahPalinUSA page:

sarahpalinusa.jpg

Oops.

Leaving aside the issue of “Is the SarahPalinUSA page really from Sarah Palin or is from someone else pulling a really good joke right now?”, the larger question is:

Why did CNN feel they needed to alter the screenshot?

I mean… did they seriously think people wouldn’t look?

Bizarre.


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PSNH’s Martin Murray on Twitter in the ice storm – and getting coverage via social media

How can Twitter be used as a communication channel in a time of crisis?

Long-time readers of this blog or FIR listeners will remember that back in January 2009 I interviewed Public Service of New Hamphsire (PSNH) spokesperson Martin Murray about his use of Twitter during the December 2008 ice storm we had. Our conversations resulted in two interviews: a 9-minute Emerging Tech Talk video interview and then a longer 30-minute FIR audio interview.

Today the folks at Ragan Communications came out with a new interview of Martin that covers some of the same territory, but also includes a story completely separate from the ice storm about how Twitter helped PSNH get additional coverage of an event. It’s a great illustration of how these social tools like Twitter, Flickr, etc. can wind up also helping get coverage in mainstream news media. Here it is:


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Social media: Where brevity is appreciated, where clarity and simplicity win

This morning by way of Skype’s publicist Chaim Haas, I learned of Renee Blodgett’s interview with Robert Scoble Skype’s chief blogger Peter Parkes (direct link to video). The interview itself was quite interesting as Peter spoke about the role blogging in particular plays within Skype and about his role as “chief blogger”, as well as how it has changed since he began in 2006. Robert Scoble also gave his perspective on how corporate blogging has evolved. It was an interesting discussion.

One phrase of Peter’s, though, stuck out in my mind as being so accurate about Twitter and really the whole current state of social media:

It’s actully quite refreshing to be able to work in an environment where brevity is appreciated, where clarity and simplicity win.

Indeed. A nice concise summary.

As I wrote about way back in December 2007, using Twitter is my daily lesson in attempting brevity. As I wrote there, it’s hard for an old-school trainer who wants to be sure that everyone completely understands to learn the art of conciseness and brevity. I keep trying 😉

The full video, which is worth watching, is here:


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Speaking at the Enterprise 2.0 conference this week in Boston

enterprise20-2009-boston-1.jpgThis week, I (Dan York) am at the Enterprise 2.0 conference today through Thursday at the Westin Boston Waterfront in downtown Boston. The keynote panel I’m on, The Future of Social Messaging in the Enterprise, doesn’t happen until Wednesday morning at 9:15am… but I came down early as a good number of the sessions are of interest.

If you are at the show and would like to say hello, please do email me. I expect to also be posting updates to Twitter on both danyork and voxeo.

You can also follow along with the conference “backchannel” on Twitter by following the hashtag “#e2conf”. Here’s an easy search URL:

http://search.twitter.com/search?q=e2conf

I expect to have a very cool Voxeo announcement out on Wednesday, too… but more on that then… 😉

P.S. And why do I do the silly “I (Dan York)” construction at the beginning of this post? Because I see my content being scraped and so “I” alone doesn’t make sense in other places the content winds up 🙂


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Twitter’s SPOF Stupidity Continues: Ever hear of redundancy?

twitterlogo.jpgWhile much of the blogosphere is currently dwelling on how great it is that Twitter is postponing its maintenance to allow Iran-related communication, my mind is still reeling from reading the Twitter blog post, particularly this part (my emphasis added):

A critical network upgrade must be performed to ensure continued operation of Twitter. In coordination with Twitter, our network host had planned this upgrade for tonight.

Like Chaim Haas, my reaction is… why is that “network host” singular?

Given the millions of people now using Twitter on an ongoing basis… given the incredibly large ecosystem of applications and systems linking in to Twitter… given the very real communications uses that Twitter has evolved to have… given all of that:

why does Twitter not have redundant connections?

This is really “Network Infrastructure 101” when you are supplying a hosted service. Anyone providing a cloud-based service should ensure that they have redundant network connections… redundant providers… redundant everything. Coming from a company (Voxeo) that provides a hosted application platform, it boggles my mind that Twitter would need to take its system down for “network maintenance”. We would never do that… our customers wouldn’t stand for it!

And that is perhaps the issue… we have customers… Twitter has users.

We ensure that we have multiple redundant providers and networks… because our customers pay us to ensure that their applications are always available. Twitter can get by on “best effort” – and on a single network provider – because no one pays…

Twitter continues to be a massive…

Single Point Of Failure

One company… providing a messaging infrastructure… obviously based on one network provider.

This is my personal frustration with Twitter. I’ve been using it for now 2.5 years or so and continue to see so many benefits to Twitter, yet as someone who has been involved with computer networks for 25+ years, the very idea of a SPOF is hideous. I’m much more interested in distributed architectures like what we see with Laconi.ca and Identi.ca,(As I wrote about a year ago.) or what Google seems to be promising with Wave.

Yet Twitter’s simplicity… it’s directory of users… it’s easy APIs… it’s ecosystem… all of those things keep us using its services…

So while I commend Twitter on listening to their users and postponing their maintenance window… I ask as a long-time user –

why do they need a maintenance window?


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