Archive for Twitter
Twitter on the Rise
I have been on Twitter for a year now and in many ways it seems “old” to me. Interestingly, it is still oh so very new to most. The growth of Twitter has been astonishing in the past few months. Much of this has been due to the prime-time airplay that this Social Media application [...]
Twitter: Bite-Sized Yipitey Yap
What’s The Deal With Twitter?
Twitter (the 140 character micro blogging platform) is growing by leaps and bounds. It still has a long way to go before it sees mass-adoption, but the past year has been monumental for this very diverse social media platform. In February, the co-founder of Twitter Evan Williams took eight minutes at the TED (Technology, Entertainment, [...]
Church Websites Fail
I was asked a good question via Twitter today that I think warrants a more in-depth commentary than 140 characters will facilitate…especially since it is actually four questions! Robert Sager asked me: “Where do you think churches are failing the most in the Web today? Simply design? Web 2.0? Social aspect of web?” Church Web [...]
What Happens When A Virus Attacks
Well, when you read a title like this, one’s mind almost always goes to a computer virus. Computer viruses are indeed bad…but physical viruses are equally disruptive. This has been a long week for me personally as I was hit at the beginning of the week with a nasty stomach virus. I couldn’t keep any [...]
Manage Twitter with a Tree?
It was only a matter of time. As Twitter has grown in popularity, some wise-guys have been hard at work solving the management of information flow that gets poured through Twitter. Hence we have seen the beta release of TweetDeck and now another groundbreaking tool called Tweetree. I am still new to both platforms, but [...]
The Tool for Managing Twitter
I have been using Twitter for close to 10 months now and continue to see excellent business and ministry networking purposes to this great social media tool. As I have continued to follow more and more interesting people, it has become increasingly difficult to stay connected with them all. It is hard to follow over [...]

