6 Reasons I’m Glad I Joined Twitter

By  on  

For the longest time I refused to do the Twitter thing. Looking back it seems stupid but I just would not join the craze. Two months and 350 updates later, I'm a proud card-carrying Twitter fanboy. Here are 6 reasons I'm glad I joined Twitter.

I get more reader interaction

I recognize that many of the readers of this blog follow me on Twitter. I love when I get comments on my articles and that has spilled into my Twitter account. Every once in a while I solicit feedback and there's never a shortage of responses. I value the time people give me when they respond so if any of you read this, thank you for responding to my quips.

I need a place I can vent to fellow web developers

When I see that a customer who required CMS capabilities has completely messed up their website by using 28 colors and sizes of text or another customer has a 12 year old managing their website, I simply MUST share this with fellow developers.

There's no better place to throw a quick razz at web friends

While developers usually respect each others choices in tools (PHP vs. Rails, MooTools vs. jQuery), I couldn't, however, live with myself if I didn't take a quick, harmless shot at jQuery and Firefox team member @reybango. Of course, he never hesitates to throw a shot my way too! Just a little fun to help us get through the day.

Sometimes you just want to make a pithy comment

Whether we know it or not, we're all smart asses. Really. And every once in a while we need to rail off a relatively meaningless, witty 140 character or less sentence. Twitter is the perfect place to do so.

It's fun to hear what other programmers think about non-web topics (aka devs have personalities?)

Web is a huge and ever growing topic, but I don't always want to hear other developers talk about it. What does @chriscoyier think about peanut butter vendors? @emwendelin spent a night with his uncle -- how did it go? It's good to get a taste of what other techies are really like away from the computer.

You get 140 characters or less

I don't have time to write novels and I don't want to read yours. The 140 character limit forces me (and you) to be brief and creative with your messages and that's the best thing in the world when I'm busy but need a little intrigue.

Did I miss something? Share!

Recent Features

  • By
    5 Awesome New Mozilla Technologies You’ve Never Heard Of

    My trip to Mozilla Summit 2013 was incredible.  I've spent so much time focusing on my project that I had lost sight of all of the great work Mozillians were putting out.  MozSummit provided the perfect reminder of how brilliant my colleagues are and how much...

  • By
    Create Namespaced Classes with MooTools

    MooTools has always gotten a bit of grief for not inherently using and standardizing namespaced-based JavaScript classes like the Dojo Toolkit does.  Many developers create their classes as globals which is generally frowned up.  I mostly disagree with that stance, but each to their own.  In any event...

Incredible Demos

  • By
    Fullscreen API

    As we move toward more true web applications, our JavaScript APIs are doing their best to keep up.  One very simple but useful new JavaScript API is the Fullscreen API.  The Fullscreen API provides a programmatic way to request fullscreen display from the user, and exit...

  • By
    MooTools ContextMenu Plugin

    ContextMenu is a highly customizable, compact context menu script written with CSS, XHTML, and the MooTools JavaScript framework. ContextMenu allows you to offer stylish, functional context menus on your website. The XHTML Menu Use a list of menu items with one link per item. The...

Discussion

  1. I see what you’re saying, but to me, it’s lost some of its appeal of late. I find that people who don’t know me never respond to my comments on their tweets.

    Perhaps I’m just a billy-no-mates :)

  2. Instead of Twitter, I got addicted to plurk. I’d like to make a twitter but I’d neglect one service for the other if I made a twitter account now.

  3. Yeah, Twitter’s great. I tried out Plurk, but it requires too much maintenance. On the other hand you don’t get as many comments/as much feedback on Twitter, so it’s somewhat of a tradeoff.

  4. try jaiku instead David – there are alot of hardcore developer on that service

  5. I was exactly like you and never really saw interest on twitter, just a few weeks ago when i published my “BlogFolio” to illustrate our agency latest works that i created my account, and use it now to add small messages to the blogfolio…. like announcing a new contract or client.

Wrap your code in <pre class="{language}"></pre> tags, link to a GitHub gist, JSFiddle fiddle, or CodePen pen to embed!