The trouble with Twitter: Tweet relevance

I always half-enjoy Twitter. Sometimes it’s brilliant, sometimes it really, really, really winds me up.

I’ve got it enabled so that I get updates on my Google instant messenger. I couldn’t cope with 250 texts every few days on my phone. The real issue, I find, is context.

Take, for example, Michael Arrington at TechCrunch. I thoroughly enjoy getting an insight into what he’s thinking, what he’s doing and so on. However it’s really difficult to follow, thus:

There is little value to me in knowing that Michael thinks that Kingmanor has made a fair point. I don’t know what the point is. And I can’t be bothered to go searching to find out because I’m in the middle of working.

So. Who’s problem is this? Well, it’s not Michael’s. It’s not Kingmanor’s. They, and I daresay a few other people are entertained, enlightened or excited by that comment.

It’s my problem. I just don’t understand it. At this level, then, my interaction with Twitter becomes highly offensive — in the context of carrying out my work day. Much like a telephone call, many of my Twitter messages are becoming interruptive rather than incidentally useful.

Then again, could this be a problem for Michael? I don’t know. Potentially.

It’s all about how you use Twitter. For example, I only ever use Twitter (my Twitter account) to send out blog post updates or to deliver updates that I hope my followers find of some (small) value. Each Tweet is a package in itself — it can be understood irrespective of whether you ‘know’ me or not.

Just now, I got an update from Mashable:

mashable: Akoha Raises $1.9M to ‘Play it Forward’ ( http://tinyurl.com/5oehum )

There’s enough information in that Tweet to enable me to evaluate it correctly and do something about it. I got value from that message. I didn’t get any value from Michael’s ‘That’s a fair comment’ message. If anything, I felt outside the game.

This is a Twitter-wide issue and certainly not just related to Michael at TechCrunch. I’d welcome your perspective.

Is my 1990s brain misconfigured for dealing with this level of continual information flow?

About Ewan

Ewan is Founder and Editor of Mobile Industry Review. He writes about a wide variety of industry issues and is usually active on Twitter most days. You can read more about him or reach him with these details.
  • Alan S>

    I suspect it's a Twitter issue. When conversations/threads ensue (as in this case), then reading Twitter is akin to hearing one side of a telephone conversation – irritating in the extreme.

  • http://www.jonathanmacdonald.com jMac

    Ewan, I think you speak for many of us in this piece.

    The fact is, its all well and good making things more personal and intuitive but sadly, without relevance that is counter-productive to effectiveness and desirability.

    So – what I guess we all do is we tolerate the tweets that are nothing to do with us – waiting until one is.

    Toleration is screwy and ends up with people finding the lack of relevance a pain in the arse (like you have here)

    I am a fully paid up member of the unofficial and (currently) singular membership group 'The Abolition of Toleration' (http://www.jonathanmacdonald.com/wp-content/upl…) and so yes, I feel your pain brother.

    I hope to God that someone takes the API (http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-developm…) and mashes up some kind of filter mechanism because currently the 'Twitter filter' is entirely manual (i.e. our eyeballs) and frankly, thats too much of an intrusion.

    I am happy to share the carrying of 'The Flag of Twilter' (my name for my fantasy Twitter Filter) and push for a better way.

  • http://www.mobileindustryreview.com smstextnews

    I really enjoyed your abolition-toleration.png image, Jonathan!

  • http://intomobile.com constantine

    It's not your fault, I'm 21 and it drives me nuts which is why I use Jaiku instead. If I see an interesting comment one of my friends made I can see which conversation that comment was added to and read the entire flow leading up to my mates comment. That is brilliant.

  • http://www.mobileindustryreview.com smstextnews

    I always think of you as a permanent age 27, Constantine

  • http://intomobile.com constantine

    Why 27?

  • http://www.mobileindustryreview.com smstextnews

    I don't know, I never think of you as a young whipper snapper of a lad! 27
    = authoritative, experienced but not old, yet, right?

  • http://www.mobileindustryreview.com Ewan @ MIR

    I always think of you as a permanent age 27, Constantine

  • http://intomobile.com constantine

    Why 27?

  • http://www.mobileindustryreview.com Ewan @ MIR

    I don't know, I never think of you as a young whipper snapper of a lad! 27
    = authoritative, experienced but not old, yet, right?

  • http://www.mobileindustryreview.com Ewan

    I always think of you as a permanent age 27, Constantine

  • http://lostupstairs.tumblr.com/ Constantine

    Why 27?

  • http://www.mobileindustryreview.com Ewan

    I don't know, I never think of you as a young whipper snapper of a lad! 27
    = authoritative, experienced but not old, yet, right?

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