Microblogging Explosion

July 3rd, 2008

Holy crap. Every week there’s a miniature gold rush when a new microblogging site is released. Twitter proved the market, and the concept is so simple that anyone with an elementary web development education can put up their own site. And, apparently they are.

So, Twitter kicked the whole thing off, and it’s a compelling system because it’s incredibly simple, and very accessible (web, IM, widgets, SMS, etc). It’s also pretty flakey right now. More on that later.

Immediately after Twitter’s user base “hockey sticked,” Pownce and Jaiku jumped on the scene, with a couple extra features, like pulling in photos from Flickr and whatnot.  [ed: turns out Jaiku launched a few months before Twitter, my bad]

FriendFeed joined the fray at around the same time, adding a veritable raft load of ways to track and comment on posts from other sites.

Then Plurk leaped into battle with it’s headless Doglephant and wildly different user interface, provoking Love It or Hate It responses from everyone who tried it. They don’t pull in other content, but they do allow discussions to grow around specific messages, and they added the concept of karma — more participation means more karma, and extra little toys to play with.

This week, Identi.ca showed up with a back to basics story, and a twist. It’s pretty much just like Twitter, and people want to give it a shot because it seems to be more reliable (more on that later). The twist is basically a marketing move: the software that powers the Identi.ca site is an open source project, so anyone with software chops can use it to create their own micro-blogging community.  Heads up, internal communications people.

Now, regarding reliability. A slightly flakey experience is not a big enough factor to drive away the masses. None of the above sites are Twitter killers, because Twitter has a critical mass of users who have shown that even if Twitter is unreliable, they’ll stick it out to stay in touch with their friends. Will it frustrate early adopters with short attention spans, and rabid interaction habits? Sure. Will they totally abandon Twitter? Not likely.

My prediction? Twitter is going to stay king of the microblogging universe for the next few years, and that universe is going to get much, much bigger. Like Gary Vaynerchuk said on his swing through Portland — “You think there’s a lot of people using Twitter now? Wait until Oprah gets on Twitter.” Hopefully, the fine folks at Twitter are planning for such an event.

I expect that we short attention span, early adopter types are going to stick with Twitter, but spend most of our time on FriendFeed. Why? Because it’s such a powerful aggregator. We’ll continue to sign up for any social web app that shows up on the radar, and we’ll use FriendFeed to track and manage all of our discussions.

8 Responses to “Microblogging Explosion”

  1. July 3rd, 2008
    By Aaron

    I guess I’m the only one who really can’t get into FriendFeed seriously. Sure, it’s fun to look at, but I need a way to participate other than the website… and clients such as Twhirl just don’t do it for me to capture the photos and comments.

    I’m loving the XMPP support on Identi.ca.

  2. July 3rd, 2008
    By Peat

    @aaron - I guess I’m in a minority on this one, but I really like Alert Thingy as a client app for FriendFeed. Regardless, I think we’re going to see a lot of improvement in the client apps over the next year or so … it’s a very immature field right now.

    XMPP support in Identi.ca is awesome from a technical perspective. As is their support for OpenID. They seem to be doing the right things for an open source project … embracing the existing standards, and commoditizing the basic Twitter-esque functionality.

  3. July 3rd, 2008
    By Momma's Tantrum

    I tried plurking, I am signed up on friend feed, I think I am signed up on pownce too. The thing is nothing is as user friendly or as fun as Twitter. I am not tech savvy enough to tolerate the other ones I think. Plus all that Left to Right stuff is nauseating. I am a Twittdict, a TwitterWhore, whatever. I am sticking with it. AND PLEASE DO NOT LET THE BIG O get in on this. We will die if she does. She kills everything she touches.

  4. July 3rd, 2008
    By Peat

    @momma - I totally agree that Twitter is the most fun of the bunch. It’s so ridiculously simple, and there’s a ton of people on it, which is a pretty hard combination to beat.

    Oprah has clout, but I wonder if the microblogging/messaging format would really catch on with her audience. It’s a compelling medium for people who intuitively gravitate towards text messages and socializing over the Internet, and the magic of Oprah is that she has a mysterious ability to convince people to try things that are a little bit outside of their comfort zone. I’m guessing she’d kill the Twitter servers with a vague hand gesture. I question how many of the crowd would embrace it and stay.

  5. July 3rd, 2008
    By John Watson

    I’ve been bummed that twitter’s IM support has been one way for so long. But, since I signed up for ping.fm and found out that I can post to twitter via IM via ping.fm, then I’m back in love with twitter again. :)

  6. July 3rd, 2008
    By Peat

    @john - ping.fm is great. Cleanly solves the problem of sending messages to all these nutty services … a broadcaster, not an aggregator. I hope it catches on.

  7. July 11th, 2008
    By Michael

    Jaiku was actually around before Twitter (just by a couple of months). Pownce launched in closed beta a year after Twitter and was opened up this January.

  8. July 11th, 2008
    By Peat

    @michael - Good call, I didn’t know Jaiku was around earlier. I’ll update the post. Thanks!

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