Chirp: Twitter’s Conference is Full of Developments

chirpChirp, the first official Twitter developers conference, was held today in San Francisco. It was clear that the powers-that-be at Twitter were saving up quite a bit of information to lay on their “ecosystem” of third-party application developers, as the day  was filled with nuggets of information.

Watching the Chirp conference live stream on Justin.tv and reading the back channel #chirp tweets, conveniently brought together in one page on  TweetChat, it was difficult to keep up with the flood of information that was being made available. Twitter is so notoriously poor at communicating with their developer community and their users, that when they’ve seemingly turned on the fire hose of information, it’s a little overwhelming.

Here are some highlights:

Stats:
Registered users = 105.8 million
Monthly uniques=180 million
Daily signups=300,000
Posts per day = 55 million
Search queries per day = 600 million (the vast majority through the API)
Over 100,000 registered Twitter applications.

Geolocation:
Twitter is releasing Points of Interest, a geolocation tool tied to places. Instead of latitude and longitude, you’d have actual place names. They say that it will complement Foursquare and Gowalla, not compete with them.

Favorites:
A new API for Favorites will unlock interesting opportunities to manipulate more data. Will it be about influence? Will it be about topics and keywords? Who knows? Hackers will have 2 days to play with it during the conference.

Annotations:
This one is big. Twitter’s API will soon allow developers to add meta data to anything. The possibilities for applications to extract and manipulate data in new and interesting ways is huge. This will be opened up in the next quarter.

Resonance Score:
Marketers, PR folk, SEO/SEM practitioners and anyone else who’s in the business of increasing influence had best listen up. A Resonance Score is the Twitter equivalent of Google’s Page Rank. It examines tweets, favorites, retweets, link clicks, avatar clicks, hashtag reuse, etc. They have theories about how this will play out, but Twitter is going to roll this out slowly while they tinker with what it really means.

Promoted Tweets:
Announced yesterday this is Twitter’s long awaited revenue model. To start, Promoted Tweets is being implemented by Starbucks, Bravo and Virgin America. They offer the brands the opportunity to pin a tweet to the top of keyword search results. The Tweet is shaded to make it stand apart from the regular stream. The length of time it will stay in that position and the value of the tweet will be  tied to Resonance Score. At the start the costing is based on CPM but will evolve into ROI once Twitter understands Resonance Score better.

promoted-tweets

On Thursday, Starbucks is starting a campaign using Promoted Tweets that will involve giving free coffee to people who come in with a reusable tumbler. They addressed the difficulty of running promotions where they are speaking to an international audience. Starbucks stated that when geolocation can be applied, they will be able to refine their  messaging.

starbucks

Twitter will be offering a 50/50 revenue split with application developers who opt-in to Promoted Tweets. Participation is not mandatory and 3rd-parties are allowed to have their own advertising models. However, Twitter is working on a policy that will prohibit the ecosystem from certain types of advertising that  would damage the brand integrity, for instance, having ads that were indistinguishable from regular tweets.

Now that Twitter will allow developers access to all that meta data through annotations, how will our data be used for targeted promoted tweets?

Mobile Apps:
The RIM partnered Blackberry app, released this week has resulted in 100,000 new users in 3 days; yesterday the Blackberry app was used on 1.7% of all Tweets. Twitter is also developing an Android app. These join the iPhone app that they released this week. These releases have caused their partners in the ecosystem to question their intentions in competing against 3rd-party development and the future stability of creating apps for Twitter.

User Streams:
Real time information being fed directly to you. No polling the system, no waiting, no rate limits. The API for this is being made available to developers for 48 hours to play with. (There’s a 2 day Twitter hacker event concurrent with Chirp.) Here’s a 3-minute clip from Ryan Sarver @rsarver detailing User Streams:


Watch live video from Bwana.TV on Justin.tv

Home for Devs:
During the conference, Twitter launched dev.twitter.com, the new home for developers to centralize and streamline availability of information and API documentation that will grow to replace the wiki and Google Docs. Documentation will now be generated directly from the code, rather than Twitter creating it manually (resulting in errors and a slow time to post.) The audience showed their relief and appreciation with the loudest applause of the day.

@Anywhere:
Also live today, the @anywere API will allow Twitter to be embedded into media outlets in an interactive way. The Guardian is incorporating @anywhere in their coverage of the UK elections as a way for people to connect directly with politicians.

Notes From the Executive:

  • Evan Williams (@Ev) said Twitter was not a social network platform, but a “public interest graph” (as opposed to Facebook’s “private social graph”).
  • Dick Costolo (@dickc) stated that Twitter is working on having syndication by the end of this year “or people back stage won’t be working at Twitter any more … including me.”
  • @dickc also said that they’d release the number of active accounts from the 105 million registered accounts. But, he stressed that Twitter is often consumed on other sites by people without accounts.
  • @Ev says Twitter will be releasing an integrated link shortener. They’ve been using one internally in their own DMs. (Uh oh Bit.ly!)

Misc:

library-of-congress

  • The Library of Congress has acquired every public tweet since Twitter started 4 years ago. They will continue to archive all public tweets.
  • 30% – 40% of the audience indicated that they were hiring.
  • Great quotes from Aaron Gotwalt of CoTweet: “Think big. Iterate violently.” and  “Central Pennsylvania: Silicon pasture”
  • will.i.am from the Black Eyed Peas took the stage to talk about how musicians will be developers, aggregators of people and content.
  • @KaraSwisher did a great job moderating a panel of Twitter application investors, injecting humour and forthrightness into the afternoon. (She was the only woman guest on the stage today.)

Developers: The Power Behind Twitter

I’ve said it many times before: Twitter gets it’s real power from 3rd-party applications. Twitter application developers are the ones who are building the tools that add value to our experience and fuel the intelligence that we’re demanding from this otherwise simplistic platform.

So, show developers a little respect and love for all that they do for Twitter users. Coding takes fuel. Find out what kind of boost your favorite app needs. Is it vocal support? If they’re fledgling, maybe they just need to pay the rent, so pay for an app or give them a donation.

Lastly, please take a few minutes to visit oneforty.com. Started by my buddy Laura Fitton (@pistachio), it’s a tremendous resource for all things Twitter (and is one of the few female-founded start-ups around Twitter.) It’s like an app store where you can search for applications, read and leave reviews, and find just what you need from one of the 100,000 registered developers in the Twitter ecosystem.

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7 Responses

  1. Kyle May 21, 2010 —

    Hi Adele,

    You already know my stance on the topic, and I still stand by it. I think Coderre would be a much larger “unifying force” if he would combine his considerable clout on twitter with what has already been established.

    He claims to do it out of fanship, and nothing else. I find that hard to believe…why would someone go out of their way to single himself out?

    To use a hockey cliché, nobody is bigger than the team, but Denis Coderre is trying to do just that.

    In my humble opinion, of course!

    PS – the “H” in the Canadiens logo does not stand for “Habitants”, as is commonly believed (I once thought that, too). The iconic “CH” logo actually stands for “Club de Hockey Canadien”.

  2. Adele McAlear May 21, 2010 —

    Kyle – thanks so much for coming by and leaving your thoughts on this. I don’t have any further insight into Denis Coderre’s motivation for starting and promoting his own hashtag, but I do find it fascinating that it’s gained so much traction to the point where it supersedes the standard choice, and I wonder why Habs fans would use it.

    As a marketer, I examine how people promote themselves and their brand in and around the events that happen around us. Although, I can understand your position as a passionate sports fan, as in Coderre’s case, I wouldn’t find it off-putting if a sports writer, such as yourself, tagged your game tweets with #habsHR in an effort create awareness for yourself and drive people to your blog. Again, what would surprise me, is if that hashtag became more popular than the #habs tag itself.

  3. P. Cromp May 21, 2010 —

    You ask Manipulation or Enthusiasm? I could be wrong but I think it started from enthusiasm.

    Myself, I became a follower of #habsDC after I heard M. Coderre on May 2nd as the last guest on TV show: http://www.radio-canada.ca/emissions/tout_le_monde_en_parle/saison6/episode.asp?idDoc=110017

    TLMEP is one of the most popular TV show in Quebec with 1 561 000 viewers for the May 2nd episode. I strongly believe that a majority of habs fan using #habsDC knew DC stand for @DenisCoderre especially in the francophone community.

    Regards

    Patricia

  4. Julie May 24, 2010 —

    I’m francophone and it’s easy for me to write in french and read tweets in french. There is no politic involve. It’s like a family.

    Julie

  5. Mathieu K Feb 13, 2011 —

    Denis Coderre a bien peu à voir dans la montée au sommet du hashtag. Il l’a initié, bien sûr, mais ce qui a permis au hashtag de devenir une entité indépendante du #habs, c’est qu’il permet aux gens de suivre une discussion principalement en français.

    Denis Coderre pourrait quitter Twitter, son hashtag lui survivrait. La “twittosphère” québécoise est petite et ses liens sont tissés serrés. Ses membres aiment se parler entre eux. Si on leur donne le choix entre une discussion globale avec 17 millions de twitteurs qui écriront en anglais ou une discussion plus locale, plus petite et, surtout, dans leur langue, celle-ci va gagner à tout coup.

    À l’ouverture des JO de Vancouver, le Québec faisait également bande à part, avec un hashtag qui utilisait JO plutôt que Vancouver ou OG.

    Denis Coderre n’est pas le politicien le plus populaire au Québec, et je ne crois pas qu’un hashtag qui vit maintenant indépendamment de lui puisse y changer grand chose.

  6. Adele McAlear Feb 15, 2011 —

    Merci pour vos commentaires et votre point de vue. Il est bon d’entendre.

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