*sponsored content*
I joined Twitter in first year of
college, 2009. Twitter was introduced to me in journalism school in
terms of its capabilities as a "huge rss feed/wire service".
Twitter made it easy to give real time updates on live events, which
you could classify using this new thing called hashtags. This was
called livetweeting.
If you had a public account, everyone
on the Internet could easily access your tweets - a capability that
didn't exist anywhere else. You could also personalize your profile
to an extent that didn't exist on Facebook, but with less of the
options for ugly shit that made Myspace a disaster.
The public relations students at my
college were probably learning about Twitter as well. Twitter
revolutionized PR. If someone had beef with/questions for a company
pre-Twitter, they would have to write a letter to the editor or some
shit. With Twitter, people could write literally anything about your
company and millions of people could see it just by searching your
company's name. I feel like this forced a lot of companies to start
using social media. It used to be like the fuckin wild wild west
before all these companies figured the game out. You would get real
time help and genuine solutions just by talking shit on a company
online.
Microbloggers were popular on Twitter.
Mans would have all their tweets be about a specific thing, and
interested people would follow them. I remember when the dude from
"Shit my Dad Says" got a book deal, which legitimized him
irl. Funny, cuz nowadays authors are legitimized when they get a blue
checkmark on Twitter. How times have changed.
The evolution of Twitter's
features/interface has -until recently - been subtle. However the
company's "off the field" evolution has been anything but.
Oh dear... |
On one hand, Twitter has always
struggled to monetize it's success. Plus you have the whole awkward
takeover/dismantling of Vine. On the other hand, Twitter has been a
key tool in actual political revolutions. It also became a
"demilitarized zone" where otherwise boring companies
started developing their own voice and even feuding with each other.
Twitter's main differentiating factors, the @ and # functions, are
now staples across social media.
Twitter changed a whole lot in 2017.
The character limit doubled. The Timeline changed from chronological
to algorithm based. I'm starting to see garbage in my feed just
because someone I follow liked it. Twitter is more and more
resembling Facebook to me (aka advertisement soup). I get the feel Twitter may be doing some last-ditch attempt to save itself.
You used to go on Twitter to laugh at
dril. Now you go to watch Hamburger Helper combat sexism and see the President of the United States threatening to start WWIII on a daily
basis. I honestly don't know what to think of Twitter anymore.
No comments:
Post a Comment