Monday, December 17, 2012

A Few Reasons Why You?d Want To Download All Of Your Tweets

2912634902_694094fa84_zToday, we learned that Twitter made good on its promise to start letting its users download all of their tweets from the beginning of their history with the service. For many geeks, there is excitement about this. It means that Twitter is showing how truly “open” they can be when it comes to your data and information, finally catching up with companies like Facebook and Google, which both allow you to grab all of your information at any time. But some are confused about what they might do with the data once they have it? As with any data, the why’s and what’s are without boundaries. It’s pretty much infinite what you can do with a bazillion tweets that you own, well some have less than others. The first thing you should do once you get the ability to download your archived tweets is to do so immediately. It won’t take up too much space on your hard-drive. If you really care about the time you’ve spent on Twitter, why not back the massive file up on a service like Google Drive, Dropbox or Box? It certainly can’t hurt. Now that you have the data, what can be done with it? Well, the tools to do cool things with massive amounts of data aren’t readily available to consumers like you, but that’s changing quickly. Services like Gnip, who have firehose access to re-sell to marketers, should absolutely take this opportunity to create consumer-facing services. What would you do with your tweets? Here are some ideas: Visualizations We’re all familiar with the “cloud” presentation of data, meaning seeing what you tweet about the most by surfacing the most popular phrases and words. Yes, it’s all about you, but it’s mighty interesting, since you probably don’t even remember 10% of what you’ve tweeted over the years. Certain words and themes could permeate and remind you of past times or how far you’ve come along personally. A perfect example is that some folks, like myself, used to tweet about how dumb the service itself was. We would ask “What is this for?” over and over. Eventually, some of us answered that question by simply tweeting more. Over the years, the themes that we’ve tweeted about changed based on current events, personal situations, job changes and more. Imagine if you could structure this data in a way that tells the story of your life.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/7Imz9bp0IL8/

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