www.Wednesday: Storm Tracking on Twitter
February 11, 2009 by Jenn Sierra
Filed under FHK WebWarriors
Our thoughts and prayers are will the families who lost loved ones in the tornadoes last night in Lone Grove, OK, and with those who suffered the loss of and damage to their homes in the Edmond area and all over the Oklahoma City and Lawton areas.
Other parts of the state were spared the brunt of the tornado damage, but many folks are dealing with severe flooding problems, and our thoughts and prayers are with them, as well.
Thank you to the citizen reporters who kept us updated throughout the evening using Twitter, and the #OKStorms hashtag to keep fellow Oklahomans in-the-know at least 5-10 minutes ahead of the major news outlets about shelters opening, schools closing, power outages, road/highways closing, damage reports, photos, weather service warnings/watches, “street-level” weather, and their own personal stories.
For more information about using Twitter Hashtags see How to Twitter, and #hastags and What to Do with Them.
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New! Twitter hashtag and feed for exposing Liberal and Progressive Hypocrisy #LibHippos
January 8, 2009 by LibHippos
Filed under FHK WebWarriors
Don’t you just hate it when so-called “liberals,” or “progressives,” act anything but? For example, when in their zeal for eliminating so-called “hate speech,” they actually act more hateful than the people they’re accusing? Or when they selectively apply their condemnation of racism to only select groups of people, but not to others? Or when politicians talk out both sides of their mouths?
Well, now you have a place to expose these Hypocritical Liberals – a.k.a. “LibHippos.”
If you have a Twitter account, be sure to follow LibHippos. To follow the feed, go to search.twitter.com, and search for the hashtag (keyword) #LibHippos, or add the following link to your feed reader:
Feed URL: http://search.twitter.com/search.atom?q=%23libhippos
To submit links or comments to the feed, be sure to include somewhere in your post the “hash tag,” or pound sign (#) and text as follows: #LibHippos
To sign up for a Twitter account, go to Twitter.com, and click “Get Started Now, and follow the instructions.

Also see: #Hashtags and What to do with Them
Cool Tools to Save Time in Social Networking
December 3, 2008 by Jenn Sierra
Filed under FHK WebWarriors
I found two great time-savers this week to help with the “tedious” part of social networking (to leave more time for the “fun” part!). I’m involved in so many social networks right now that I was beginning to find them incredibly time-consuming. It’s important not to automate your social networking activities entirely. Not many people want to “socialize” with a spambot – they’d like to know they’re dealing with a real live person. However, using these tools appropriately can free up some of your time online so that you can spend it actually enjoying the process of social networking, instead of constantly logging in and copying and pasting important updates from one network to another.
I started paying attention to some of my friends’ Twitter and Facebook updates, and discovered several of them were using Ping.fm. I checked it out – and love Ping.fm. You should check it out, too! From Ping.fm, I can Tweet, and update several of my networks and microblogs (Linked-IN, Facebook, MySpace, Plurk, Twitter, FriendFeed, del.icio.us, etc.) all at once. Some folks even use it to update their Instant-Messaging buddies.
It takes a few minutes to set up, because you have to enter all of your user ID’s and passwords on all of your various networks, but once you’ve done that, you can easily send out a post about your latest blog entry, or announce your latest bit of news to all of your friends on all of your networks all at once. There are also all sorts of options for customizing and selecting which networks to update with what. Check it out!
[Insert the obligatory warning about not overutilizing this great tool, thus loosing all of your online friends all at once in the process. Remember, many of your friends probably follow you on more than one social network, so this service is not the place to auto-feed ALL of your posts from ALL of your blogs to ALL of your networks. Please. Seriously. We now return you to our regularly-scheduled newletter update.]
The free version of this service allows you to schedule (future-post) your Tweets on Twitter. This is very convenient for recurring events such as iRadio broadcasts, or for times when you’ll be on vacation, but still need to send reminders to your Twitter followers.
This service also allows you to set up one custom (filtered) version of your Twitterfeed to post on your blog or elsewhere (first feed is free – additional feeds available for purchase). This is great, because you can filter out the “chat” and silliness that makes Twitter fun for you but might be lost on your blog readers, and post just the “serious” stuff in the feed that displays on your blog or website.
TweetLater.com (free version) also gives you a “birdseye view” of all of your replies on all of your Twitter accounts all at once. It actually alerts you to more replies than your @replies feature on Twitter. The @replies feature on Twitter only displays tweets which begin with @yourusername. It will not display tweets which have @yourusername displayed elsewhere in the tweet but TweetLater.com’s feed does pick these up.
For example, this would show up in the @replies section on Twitter:
@yourusername – Thanks for the follow!
But this would not show up in your @replies section on Twitter (you would need to use a service like TweetLater.com, or Search.Twitter.com to find it):
@hisusername, @herusername, @yourusername – Check out my new avatar!
The paid version of this service (PostLater.com-$10/mo) allows you to future-post to any service, including Ping.fm, which does not already have a future-posting feature.
#hashtags and What do Do with Them
September 9, 2008 by Jenn Sierra
Filed under FHK WebWarriors
Those who have recently discovered Twitter.com have probably noticed people adding “#whatever” to the end of their posts (e.g. #dontgo, #palin, #yeswecantor, #rnc08, #rnc08, etc.) Why are they doing this?
According to hashtags.com:
You create a hashtag simply by prefixing a word with a hash symbol:
Hashtags were developed as a means to create “groupings” on Twitter, without having to change the basic service. The hash symbol is a convention borrowed primarily from IRC channels, and later from Jaiku’s channels.
hashtags.org now provides real-time tracking of Twitter hashtags. Opt-in by following @hashtags to have your hashtags tracked.
Hashtags were popularized during the San Diego forest fires in 2007 when Nate Ritter used the hashtag “#sandiegofire” to identify his updates related to the disaster.
An easy way to follow your favorite hashtags is to go to search.twitter.com, and enter your tag into the search box. You can either read the feed right from there, or if you have more than one, you can add the feed (click the little orange box in the upper right-hand corner) to your favorite feed reader. (Bonus tip – search.twitter.com is also an easy way to quickly see who has responded to your tweets – simply search for @yourusername).
If you do not have a Twitter account – the sign-up is easy. Just go to Twitter.com, and sign up. Twitter is designed for mobile phones but can also be accessed from your PC, and is a very easy, fun way to get immediate updates on current events.


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