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Archive for June, 2009

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A popular social network that has a strong following on the web and on the iPhone is now taking aim at the Android market. Brightkite, a slick little app that lets you check in at any location and share photos and notes with your friends, is available for free in the Android store as of this week. Current Brightkite users won’t be disappointed with the Android version, and Android users will appreciate how it takes advantage of their device’s location-based services.

The long-awaited app - there were reports over a year ago that it was in the works - takes advantage of Android’s built in Google maps to let you visualize your friends’ locations instead of reading them in a list. It also uses Android’s notifications to alert you to any new activity in your friend stream. As an iPhone owner, I’m loathe to it admit it, but this looks even better than the iPhone version of the app. The maps, especially, are a great touch.

Brightkite for Android is the best version yet originally appeared on Download Squad on Tue, 30 Jun 2009 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The trend of using Twitter for absolutely everything doesn’t show signs of stopping. Tweetboard, the latest hot Twitter add-on, inserts Twitter as a comment system for your website. Conversation on the site is posted (neatly threaded, of course) in an expandable sidebar, and a user’s comments also post to their Twitter account. To make it easier for people who are reading these tweets outside of Tweetboard, there are two shorturls “posted.at” and “inreply.to,” that give readers a little context and a link to view the thread.

Tweetboard’s design is relatively inoffensive: it puts a tab off to the left side of your site with the number of tweets a site visitor hasn’t read. Fortunately, it’s a pretty small tab, so it’s not completely annoying to people who don’t care about Tweetboard. Once expanded, Tweetboard is laid out with tabs for all comments or just the current thread, and there’s a space at the top to post your own comments.

Judging by the Tweetboard’s quick jump to the top of Twitter Trending Topics when it launched, you’re probably going to start seeing it all over the place pretty quickly. It’s hard to tell right now whether it’s going to be a momentary fad or a lasting fixture. I can see the quick setup and ease-of-use appealing to site owners, but users might not go for Tweetboard. Some people just don’t want Twitter accounts, and some people who have Twitter accounts might prefer that you keep your comments on your own site.

Tweetboard turns Twitter into a comment system for your site originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 29 Jun 2009 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Over the past year, there’s been something of a gold-rush for Twitter clients on the iPhone. From Twitterrific to Twitterfon, Tweetie to the recently-launched TweetDeck, there’s a bucketload of apps to let you use Twitter on the go. Today sees the launch of another challenger for space on your homescreen: Birdfeed [iTunes Link]: “A very nice Twitter client for your iPhone”.

In trying Birdfeed this evening, it’s clear that a huge amount of time has been spent on the application from the exceptional icons (similar in style to those in another Download Squad favourite-app, Things) to some smart touches. Here’s just some that caught my eye:

  • a small dot in the ‘Compose Tweet’ button to show the presence of a draft
  • a super-handy ‘home’ button that takes you back to your original list of tweets when you’re drilling-down in the options
  • the auto-loading of more tweets once you reach the bottom of the list
  • integration with services like Favrd.

It’s worth noting that Birdfeed doesn’t do absolutely everything you may see in other clients. However that’s of little concern to me quite frankly, as it features all the options I need on the go. Birdfeed is extremely well designed, super-snappy and well worth the $4.99 price. I know, we’re fickle here at Download Squad when it comes to Twitter clients. However if you’re wanting a slick new Twitter client, Birdfeed gets our thumbs up.

Continue reading Birdfeed: A slick Twitter client for your iPhone

Birdfeed: A slick Twitter client for your iPhone originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 29 Jun 2009 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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I wrote the other day about the iPhone version of AIM, and how it takes advantage of push notifications in iPhone 3.0., but since then I’ve been testing a different chat client that really takes things to the next level: BeejiveIM. You might be put off by the $10 purchase price, but if you’re an avid IM fanatic, it will be worth every penny. BeejiveIM supports AIM, Google Chat, MSN, Yahoo!, Facebook and MySpace in a smart layout that makes it the most usable chat app I’ve tried on the iPhone yet.

The key features that make BeejiveIM a killer app are its support for push notifications, its horizontal keyboard, and the elegant way it organizes open chats. Rather than forcing you to dig through submenus on your buddy list, BeejiveIM puts the buddy list on one screen, and a list of your open chats on another. If someone IMs you while you have a chat open, you can tap once on the number of unread messages to switch between chats. This is right in so many ways, and avoids the clunky feeling of having to go back to your buddy list to switch to another conversation.

Sure, $10 is on the high end of the App Store price range, but there’s nothing going that beats BeejiveIM at what it does. It’s replaced both the AIM app and the Meebo web app on my home screen.

BeejiveIM, now with Push, is the best iPhone chat client so far originally appeared on Download Squad on Sat, 27 Jun 2009 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharing pictures on FriendFeed is nothing new, but now it’s just as easy to share other file types on the popular social network. You can either upload a file on the FriendFeed website, or email it as an attachment to share@friendfeed.com. The feature is intended for stuff like PDFs and spreadsheets, but you can also upload music files like mp3s and m4as.

Mp3s are playable and downloadable on the site, but there’s a 3-a-day limit on the number of audio files each user can share. You can’t upload movies, and limit on mp3s suggests that media files aren’t the main focus here. Based on their blog post, FriendFeed mostly intends this feature for groups who use FriendFeed to collaborate and need to pass files around, and that’s how the FriendFeed team has been using it internally.

FriendFeed introduces file sharing originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 24 Jun 2009 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Now that version 3.0 of the iPhone operating system allows third-party apps to take advantage of push notifications, we’re starting to see some of the first major push apps popping up. AIM for iPhone, available as a free ad-supported app or a $2.99 ad-free version, now offers push notifications. Now AIM doesn’t have to be open for you to see when you’ve got a new IM coming in.

New push notifications pop up just like SMS messages, but you can also set AIM to badge its icon with the number of new messages you have, or play a sound when a new one comes in. Since third-party apps aren’t allowed to run in the background on the iPhone, push makes AIM a lot more practical than it was when you had to have it open and active to see your new messages.

[via Lifehacker]

AIM for iPhone: now with push notifications originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 24 Jun 2009 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TweetBeepIf your job has you tasked with monitoring your company’s online presence, you’re probably dealing with Twitter in some way. Running occasional manual searches for your company’s name is one way to go, but a better way would be to sign up with a service like TweetBeep.

TweetBeep is a free service that will email you as frequently as once per hour with any Twitter mentions of the search terms of your choice. The service is ad-supported, but if you find that you need it, TweetBeep also offers a premium option for $20US/month that allows you to receive updates as frequently as every 15 minutes, up to 200 different alert searches, and no advertising.

While TweetBeep allows you to set a number of criteria for your alerts, one of the most interesting is the ability to set an “Attitude” criteria. You can choose from three:

  • Positive attitude
  • Negative attitude
  • Asking a question

This appears to be a fantastic way to stay on top of how people are perceiving your company or brand, and gives you the ability to very quickly react to your customers or users. It can also be useful for heavy Twitter users to ensure they don’t miss any mentions. I should note that as of the time of this writing I had some difficulty with the email confirmation process - it took multiple requests and over an hour before my email confirmation arrived in my inbox.

[via Stay N' Alive]

TweetBeep - track Twitter mentions via email originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 24 Jun 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Twitter-TrainIs Twitter a popularity contest? If you think so, then you might be interested in Twitter-Train, but for the sane people reading this you’ll probably want to move on.

Twitter-Train is essentially a pyramid scheme whereby if you follow a prescribed list of Twitter accounts, you will be added to that same list for the next 40 Twitter-Train users. Basically, by willfully polluting your Twitter stream with updates from Twitter accounts that you care nothing about, you get the benefit of being followed by 40 people that care nothing about you. That’s a win-win if I ever saw one.

I mean seriously, what is the point of this? I can think of only one, and that would be if you somehow got paid to inflate an account’s Twitter followers by any means possible. But in terms of real value, there is none to be had here. You now have to filter through tweets that mean nothing to you, and the “followers” that you acquire are essentially doing the same thing.

I suspect this is one of the reasons that Twitter has not yet added host-side filtering to the service (the other being that Twitter seems busy just keeping the service up). Twitter clients like TweetDeck and Seesmic Desktop offer client-side filtering, which allows you to “follow” huge amounts of people while actually ignoring them. While I suppose to each their own, it’s still frustrating to see how users willfully abuse a system just to inflate their follower numbers to appear more important. Twitter seems to agree, given that they are disabling the auto-follow feature that had been enabled for certain select Twitter users.

I think Twitter should hide follower counts so that there is very little ego-boost from having a huge number of followers. This isn’t going to stop people that want to use Twitter as a spamming service, but it will kill the ego game that is plaguing most social networks.

Twitter-Train - pyramid scheme for low-value Twitter followers originally appeared on Download Squad on Tue, 23 Jun 2009 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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It looks like real-time search - mainly built around Twitter - is the hot new bandwagon to jump on. Twitscoop, Scoopler, Twingly, Searchmerge, Collecta … we’ve written about all of these this year, and the grab for real-time search traffic hasn’t stopped yet. CrowdEye is the latest entry to catch our attention in this already-crowded field.

CrowdEye is limited compared to some of the above-mentioned competitors, in that it only searches Twitter. Collecta, for example, searches photos, news stories, and other microblogging services, and offers the option to filter any of those out if they’re too much for you. CrowdEye does offer some Twitter data that its competitors don’t, though: the popular links results are nice, and the graph of popularity over time for your search term could also be useful. For getting a comprehensive picture of what’s going on in real time, though, I think search sites are going to have to go beyond Twitter. Even popular Twitpics and Yfrog pictures would add a lot to CrowdEye, and that seems within the site’s capabilities to do.

CrowdEye: the real-time search space is getting crowded originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 22 Jun 2009 16:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The 140-character limit on each post is one of the most appealing things about Twitter, but it can also be one of the most annoying. That’s why uri.is was created. You can write as much as you want and click to post to Twitter, and uri.is will link to your full text via a shortened URL instead of cutting you off. Sometimes you have something that’s too long to tweet, but not long enough or permanent enough to post on your blog, so uri.is offers something in between.

Uri.is was built in a weekend, but it’s already got some good features, like auto-shortening URLs within your posts, to make sure as much of your long post as possible actually goes out to Twitter. The developer reports that he’s interested in having uri.is integrated with a major Twitter app like Seesmic or Tweetdeck, which is really the only way to achieve the goal of making it as easy to post long messages to Twitter as short ones. A bookmarklet or a Greasemonkey script would perhaps be more realistic ways to improve the service, so it’s nice to see that those are in the works, too.

Extend your Twitter posts with uri.is originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 22 Jun 2009 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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