Archive for Featured Articles
Organizing Twitter with hashtags
January 28th, 2009 • 11 comments
Tags: hashtags, tagging, twitter
The use of hashtags is a valuable skill for serious Twitter users. They aren’t really very difficult to grasp and use, and they really pay off. The challenge is to educate as many people as possible about the use of hashtags so that their use becomes more widespread, and they will be more valuable to everyone in the community.
You may have seen a user include a number sign (#) directly followed by a word in one of their tweets. This is a hashtag in use. The user is tagging his tweet with that word. These tags are linked by most Twitter clients to the search page for that word which will find for you other tweets with the same tag. This is often used in the case of large events. Livebloggers create a hashtag, inform others, and use it on every tweet that is related to the event. For example, the hashtag for the inauguration was #inaug09. Keep in mind there is nothing magical about that particular tag except that it links to a search for other tweets with the tag included. The tag could just have easily been #inauguration; in fact, it was. Some users decided on the tag #inaug09 while others used the tag #inauguration. I would probably favor the former since it is a little shorter while still clear, but one is just as valid as the other.
There is no process associated with creating a hashtag. Just include it in a post, and it is created. It’s value will come mostly from others using it. However, even if you are the only user to ever use a hashtag, it can still have immense value. My wife (her Twitter is @tiffypooh in case you’re wondering) was recently captivated by the We Are One inaugural celebration. She could have wasted space in each tweet to specify the event she was tweeting about, or she could have left it ambiguous and just included the information she wanted to get across. Instead, she created a hashtag (#weareone) and included that in every post. Not only was this a way to organize Twitter as a whole (at least if others used her tag), but it was a short way to let her readers know what she was talking about. This eases the pain of having to duplicate so much information in each little 140-character message.
Here is my suggested use of hashtags. This is a pretty open-ended concept so there are certainly other ways to use it. Use them however you wish, but if you don’t know what to do with them, try following these steps:
- Check to see if there is already a hashtag for your topic. Hashtags become more valuable as more people use them. Don’t create a hashtag unless there aren’t any for what you’re talking about or you really think the ones that exist are terrible. If a good one exists, simply write your post and include it somewhere. If a hashtag does not exist…
- Come up with a good hashtag for your topic. It should be short but easily recognizable even by a user who hasn’t been told explicitly its meaning.
- Introduce your hashtag by telling your followers what it is for and asking them to use it in their messages on the same subject. Be sure you actually include the hashtag in this message.
- Write your tweets on the subject and include the tag. You may include it in the context of the message like this: “I’m so excited about the #weareone inaugural celebration!” Alternately, you may just want to tack it on to the end like this: “The mix of people and performers is so ecclectic. I love that so many different people are excited! #weareone”
Hashtags are incredibly useful They are currently used only by a small percentage of the Twitter community. Luckily, a small percentage of the Twitter community is quite a lot of people. This means you can still get a lot out of using tags both in your own tweets and to find topics you want to see on Twitter.
If you like this post, please follow me on Twitter @ twitter.com/raddevon. For more posts like this, subscribe to the raddevon.com RSS feed (or maybe you only want the Internet category feed).
Video: Google Reader Basics Tutorial
January 23rd, 2009 •
Tags: feeds, google reader, howto, rss, tutorial, xml
This is the first episode of what I intend to be a bi-weekly video show. Please leave a comment and let me know what you think about it. If you have ideas for what you would like me to cover in a show, leave that in the comments as well. Not every episode will be an instructional screencast. I intend to cover much of the same material in the show as you might find on the site. I hope you like it. Make sure to subscribe in iTunes or your podcatcher. You can add either the HD Quicktime format (iTunes) or the iPod format (iTunes) to your podcatcher of choice! Two additional feed options are coming soon: Standard Definition Quicktime and Audio-only MP3.
Have you ever wondered how some people seem to keep track of all the latest news breaking online? How are they able to follow so many web sites? The secret is RSS coupled with a good feed reader. There are tons of options for feed reading including a multitude of both desktop applications and web-based applications. This tutorial focuses on one of the most popular options, Google Reader. Like many of Google’s services it has a simple interface, is free, fast, and available anywhere.
In the video, I demonstrate how to find feeds and add them to the app. Then I show how to use basic keyboard navigation. Here is a comprehensive list of keyboard shortcuts for you keyboard junkies:
| j/k | item down/up | selects the next/previous item in the list |
| space/shift-space | page down/up | moves the page down/up |
| n/p | scan down/up | in list view, selects the next item without opening it |
| o | open/close item | in list view, expands or collapses the selected item |
| enter | open/close item | in list view, expands or collapses the selected item |
| s | toggle star | stars the selected item |
| shift-s | toggle share | shares the selected item |
| m | mark as read/unread | switches the read state of the selected item |
| t | tag an item | opens the tagging field for the selected item |
| v | view original | opens the original source for this article in a new window |
| shift-a | mark all as read | marks all items in the current view as read |
| 1 | expanded view | displays the subscription as expanded items |
| 2 | list view | displays the subscription as a list of headlines |
| r | refresh | refreshes the unread counts in the navigation |
| shift-n/p | navigation down/up | selects the next/previous subscription or folder in the navigation |
| shift-x | navigation expand/collapse | expand or collapse a folder selected in the navigation |
| shift-o | navigation open subscription | opens the item currently selected in the navigation |
| gh | go to home | goes to the Google Reader homepage |
| ga | go to all items | goes to the “All items” view |
| gs | go to starred items | goes to the “Starred items” view |
| gt | go to tag | allows you to navigate to a tag by entering the tag name |
| gu | go to subscription | allows you to navigate to a subscription by entering the subscription name |
| u | toggle full screen mode | hides and shows the list of subscriptions |
| ? | keyboard shortcuts help | displays a quick guide to all of Reader’s shortcuts |
There are a couple of useful shortcuts that I forgot to mention in the video. The “g” shortcuts allow you to filter your feeds in different ways. Press “g” followed by “a” to go to the all items view; “g” followed by “s” will show your starred stories; and “g” followed by “u” shows an overlay that lists all your subscribed feeds. Start typing the name of the feed you want to view and press enter to show stories only from that feed.
Here are some cool feeds to get you started. Take note that these feeds won’t do much without some sort of feed reader to view them. I am linking directly to the RSS not to the web site.
Tech
Internet
Gaming
Download the podcast
For fans of this site, those feeds will get you off to a good start. Don’t forget to subscribe to the raddevon.com feed! Also, feel free to choose one of the category feeds on the right if you want only one category of posts. Be sure to talk back in the comments. Which other feed readers do you use, and what makes them better than the mighty Google? Until next time!
Gaming podcasts: What to do in the aftermath of the 1Up Show
January 23rd, 2009 •
Tags: 1Up, 1Up Show, Area 5, Bytejacker, EGM, games, Gameular, Jeff Gerstmann, podcast, Rebel FM, reviews, Totally Rad Show, video podcast
It’s still hard to believe the 1Up Show is gone. Its audio got me through many commutes; its video tantalized me into buying countless games I could not afford. But no more. What the hell am I doing getting sappy about a video podcast? Instead we’ll solve this little problem by finding some excellent substitutes to fill the gaping hole in my soul.
The first show I want to mention doesn’t really replace the content provided by the 1Up Show which only covered indie titles occasionally, but chances are if you enjoyed the 1Up Show, you may also enjoy a little show called Bytejacker. Episodes are short and present a few cool indie titles in rapid succession during the show’s cornerstone segment, the aptly named Free Indie Rapid-Fire. The show offers up two episodes weekly. The first presents three indie titles and asks users to return to the site after playing all of them to vote for their favorites; the second reveals the results. The host Anthony Carboni is great and the entire show is wonderfully produced with a quality not unlike the 1Up video podcast.
The immensely popular and often hilarious Totally Rad Show doesn’t cover the number of games covered by the 1Up Show. It’s probably because they also review movies, TV shows, and comic books. It makes up for the lack of breadth with wonderful style and offers a great time. Like 1Up, the totally rad hosts (Alex Albrecht, Jeff Cannata, and Dan Trachtenberg) cover major releases along with the occasional downloadable title or iPhone game. The hosts each seem to have differing opinions about what they like in a game. So, there’s a good chance you will find one of them whose taste will align more with your own.
If you were paying attention when the Jeff Gerstmann/GameSpot controversy broke and felt the outrage many of us felt, you may be interested in some truly independent gaming journalism. Most everyone from 1Up/EGM is now part of some smaller project which makes me more confident that they will not be pressured to compromise their journalistic integrity to grease the wheels of the ad revenue machine. However, nothing gets more independent than Gameular—a YouTube-like site for game reviews. Watch reviews by other members and post your own. The reviews you see here are less likely to have been bought, but they are also likely produced by someone who is not a professional. In fact, they are most likely far from it.
Last but definitely not least, the best way to approximate the experience of enjoying an hour-long episode of the 1Up Show is by following the makers to their next projects. So far we already have two excellent projects—one audio and one video—from the same tireless individuals that brought you an hour or more of gaming goodness weekly. Rebel FM is an audio podcast devoted to video games, as you might have guessed. The guys seem to have no problem talking about games that aren’t necessarily new releases which makes this feel more authentic in a way. You and I know that the games we play aren’t always those that have hit store shelves within the past two or three weeks. The shows have run about an hour each so far and will be very satisfying to fans of 1Up’s various podcasts. The video podcast, Area 5 will be wonderfully familiar to 1Up Show fans. It is really difficult to tell it from its predecessor. Much of the old gang is here, it is funny, informative, and entertaining. The first episode is currently available at the web site. The guys are also working on some way to make the gig sustainable so there may be money involved at some point, but, to be quite honest, I would much prefer a reviewer take money from me directly rather than from the entities that create the works which they are reviewing.
I hope these options will get you through all the sleepless nights, the boring drives to work or school, the seemingly endless flights with much the same joy as the gaming show we all loved. I think I can speak for most of the gaming community in saying we are glad to have our old show back so soon in some form—in many forms actually—although even the alternatives in this space are no slouches.
Hi! I’m the new raddevon.com.
Welcome to the new raddevon.com. Whereas, at this location you would formerly find the random ravings of a lunatic, you will now find the more-focused ramblings of said lunatic.
If you enjoyed my posts of whatever I wanted to write at the given time, you may still find those at me.raddevon.com. This site is now devoted to technology, the Internet, and gaming. If you’re into that sort of thing, please subscribe to the blog. I promise to deliver the goods straight to your favorite RSS reader (which is no doubt Google Reader… unless it isn’t). You’ll get a unique perspective on whatever tech news is breaking as well as insight into the gaming industry from a guy with no real expertise whatsoever aside from rabidly devouring nearly every hot new game that has come down the line for the past 22 years.
I want to give you cool stuff you may not see at every other tech site. In return, I want you to comment. Respond to me, argue with me, let me know what you want more of, comment with information I left out of the original post, or just comment with some pedantic grammar correction (you jerk).
Oh yeah. To get the ball rolling, I’m going to repost some things from my old site that may be relevent here. Don’t worry. This will not become a trend. There will otherwise never be any crossposting between this site and my personal one.
Enough of the introduction. If you are interested in writing a guest post, please send in your submissions. If I like it, I’ll post it on the blog with a plug for your own site (if you wish). Thanks for reading.
