widget

Changes at Twittown

First of all sorry for the very long radio silence. We have seen a lot happen in the world of twitter and also social networking over the past year. According to traffic reports, the info on Twittown is still very useful to many of you. We are in the planning stages of revamping Twittown to provide an even better information source for not only twitter and twitter applications but for a wider range of applications and widgets for social networking sites / platforms such as facebook, myspace, hi5, orkut, friendster etc. and also mobile phone platforms such as iphone and android.

As plans develop you will see changes happen on the site itself and also in the blogs, which will be more frequent in the very near future.

Welcome back and we look forward to building and extending a useful community for everybody interested in social networking and mobile widgets and applications for both users and developers.

If you would like to make a suggestion for content or features that you would like to see, let us know in the comments, we would love to hear your ideas!

Now you can Twitter in the future - from today!

With the constant updating, tweets and twittering going on, we all thought we were in the know and keeping our friends right up to date, to the second, right? Chris24.ca , the developer of Tweetahead doesn't think so, he can help you to do one better. He (and Tweetahead) can help you to Tweet into the future! Yup, you heard right, you can set up tweets now and deliver them into the future.   The possibilities are endless.  Now you can even automate yourself on Twitter!

The Tweet Ahead app is available as a Mac OS X dashboard Widget and can be downloaded here .

There is also a Tweet Ahead web page but we are not exactly sure what it does.  There is no info and it just asks you for a user ID and password.  We weren't comfortable entering our Twitter ID in here when we don't even know what the site is for or what it does.  

Anyway, the concept is cool.  If anyone has more details, let us all know in the comments.  

tweetahead 

Tweetahead

"The TweetAhead widget allows you to schedule messages in advance (commonly referred to as “Tweets”) on the popular Twitter service. This means that your friends (or otherwise) will be able to know exactly what you’re doing even what your not at your computer. Fuel your twitter addiction with TweetAhead!"

Twitter from Facebook

With all the rage about the new Facebook platform , we wondered if it would help twitterers. Well we are in luck. The applications and widgets that are available inside Facebook include a twitter widget / application. To Twitter in Facebook:

1. Go to this link

2. Find and add the Twitter application

3. Start twittering in facebook

 twitter in facebook

Review of Three Twitter Mac OS X Dashboard Widgets

This review of Mac OS X dashboard widgets all came from my failure to figure out how to change the account details in Twitteriffic . Twitteriffic served well for a while but when we moved over to the new name and site, we needed a twitter name to match and wanted to change. No dice. Tried deleting prefs, looking high and low for a hidden button, somewhere, anywhere to do this. None to be found. Another frustration was that Twitteriffic kept losing it's connection and then would bring itself to the front and selected application. So you would be typing away in word (or doing whatever) and it would make you switch to Twitteriffic and click the box to confirm the error. I found a setting to turn this off in the end but it was too late, the search for a simple and easy way to update to twitter had already begun.

I wanted simple. Nothing popping up all the time to interrupt what I am doing but also easily accessible to use any time. So, without further ado.. I present the three contenders. Twitgit , Twidgit and the awkwardly named Twitterlex .

Mac twitter widgets

Twitgit (#3 in the screenshots above and below) threw us off as to set it up it was asking for your email. We didn’t know what email we signed up with so tried our twitter account along with the password anyway. It worked in the end. It first comes up with a whole list of yours and your friend’s tweets. Then after you enter a tweet, yours is only there. Couldn’t work out how to get the timeline back. One good thing that was nice though is that your twitter ID was highlighted in that last post you made and you can go directly to your twitter page on the web. One other thing that I noticed is that when you update from another client or channel, Twitgit doesn’t get the update. So unless you update in Twitgit, then you can’t see what your last post was. One last thing that was missing in Twitgit was the countdown for the number of characters you have left in your 140 character post. For the reasons above plus some unknown reason, I just didn’t like Twitgit. Next please!

Twidget (#1 in the screenshots below) was the most simple and easy of the three widgets. You enter your twitter username and password, click done and your are ready to go. You are presented with an empty box and a countdown to how many characters you have left (although for some reason it counts down from 153 instead of 140). You just type in your tweet, click update and you are done. On this one some of your last post is above the text entry box so you can see what you said. The bad part is that you can not click on your username to goto your account on the web. Another downside was that the latest post didn’t update when you update from other clients. Despite the very minor downfalls, at this point I thought Twidget was going to be the one. Until..

mac os x twitter widget

Twitterlex (#2 in pics below) came along. During testing we noticed that our own tweets from the web and the other two were appearing almost instantly in Twitterlex. It seemed to be much more ‘aware’ in fetching the tweets. It just seemed nicer to have a smarter client. It is not perfect of course though. I was not really sure about what it should be displaying and when. My latest posts were clickable and I could go to my web twitter page but those were soon replaced by my friends tweets (which I didn’t mind). It also was the only one of the three to have a refresh button which is nice. The other nifty feature was support for growl. I use growl for many things and it is great. For twitter, it is too much for me though and it was starting to annoy. This was easily fixed by going into growl properties and turning Twitterlex growl off.

Twitterlex is the winner in this round. We will wait and see what comes out of the other corners for their next releases.

 

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