J. Phil is a guest author who maintains the blog scribkin – where code and culture converge. Twitter is all about instant response and lively conversation. So when you want to look up some recent tweets that someone you know has sent, but they’ve been quiet for a while, you are forced to use […]
Read more[Twitter Apps] Twitter Ratio and Doesfollow
I’ve recently discovered some more great Twitter apps for your entertainment (and my own). Twitter Friend-Follower Ratio First I have Twitter Ratio. Twitter Ratio is petty self-explanatory. You just hand over your Twitter credentials to the service and out pops your twitter ratio. What’s a Twitter Ratio? It’s the ratio of your followers and followings […]
Read moreFF To Go: FriendFeed Is Officially Mobile Friendly
RSSmeme developer Benjamin Golub is continuing to surprise us. Last Saturday, Ben gave us Tweet-2-Tweet, a Twitter app that allows you to see the conversation between two Twitter users that reminded me a lot of Facebook’s wall-to-wall feature. This week, Ben has given FriendFeed users something really special and long overdue: FF To Go. (Please […]
Read moreFeedalizr FriendFeed App Is Back In The Game
The first AIR app for FriendFeed, Feedalizr has been suspiciously silent up until today. When the app first debuted, I didn’t like it one bit. Compared to Alert Thingy and Twhirl, it just didn’t compare. A little after it’s debut, Feedalizr released another update, but still wasn’t a competitor. Today, Feedalizr finally shows some […]
Read moreWhat College Students Can’t Get From Blogging
When it comes to college students, a lot of us don’t blog even though we should. I can definitely state that I’m part of the handful that do and it can be a tad infuriating when you see the benefits that your peers don’t. The benefit for me is being able to see both sides […]
Read moreFriendFeed And Your Personal Brand
What I’d like to touch on today isn’t on FriendFeed’s utility, but to focus on an aspect of networking that FriendFeed has a lot of potential for everyone, even if you don’t realize it yet.
Read more