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Twitter as your Command Line Interface

April 17, 2007 – 8:30 am

CLI for Twitter

[this has to be quick as I'm running late for the Web2Open, but...]

Currently, many companies are using Twitter for their service updates or company announcements (or, in the case of the news, for headlines)…but they aren’t allowing the users to interact with their sites/apps in the other direction.

Akin to YubNub, I think it’s high time that web apps start looking at Twitter as their Command Line Interface. A way for me to quickly retrieve data, like addresses from local search (as in the example I concocted above for a Yahoo!Local search), to send in information (i.e. sending your timetracking to Harvest, or a command to Blinksale to invoice a client, etc.).

We have many options we for Onramps, but I think Twitter provides a really useful, simple baseline to work with. Perhaps it will be their ultimate business model?

Hell, if the web apps don’t build it, we could always do some experimentation with this over the next two days of the Mashroom. :)

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18 Comments

  • Neil Ford

    Add in the ability for Mac users to use Quicksilver to update Twitter (http://integral.grahamenglish.net/graham-english/iquicktwitter-my-quicksilver-twitter-ichat-growl-hack/) and you have a really powerful combination of tools.

    It’s for cases like this that I really wish I could code in a useful language.

    - Neil.

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 9:13 am |
  • kosmar

    with twitter not being ssl encrypted (which means anyone in your network can hijack your account) i consider this an interesting but rather careless idea

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 9:21 am |
  • Mark

    ActiveBuddy/BuddyScript/Conversagent provided this on IM…though it never quite took off. SmarterChild could do all this.

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 9:37 am |
  • miss rogue

    Sure, but everyone and their dog uses Twitter. It’s an opportunity.

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 10:30 am |
  • miss rogue

    Yes…and maybe that is the issue to solve. :) Definitely the search feature isn’t that ‘careless’.

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 10:35 am |
  • Jacob Patton

    Hey Tara, don’t forget Google SMS for your Yahoo Local-like searches :-)

    You’ve hit on a great idea, though. Several services let you interact with their offerings via SMS, but with the reach Twitter has, it could let developers build services on top of it’s interface, making the room for innovation much, much larger. Arguably, they already do this via their API, but the interface is still a little lacking in parts (and of course they’ve got to get rid of their performance problems until they can really roll out something robust enough to manage the calls of a million mashups mashing. You can bet, though, that this is going to be the future of Twitter and a lot of other apps on the web!

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 10:58 am |
  • Adam Kalsey

    Take a look at my friends at IMified. They’ve built a platform that offers a command line for the web over instant messaging. IM has significantly more market penetration than Twitter (or to riff off Tara’s statement, everybody and their mother uses IM).

    http://imified.com/

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 11:22 am |
  • Adam Kalsey

    Oh, yeah, and they’re already got an API that allows developers to build services on top of it.

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 11:24 am |
  • Mark

    That’s my point, though :) Everyone uses IM. IM is on cell phones. The opportunity was there as well. It was there for businesses too.

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 12:39 pm |
  • Anonymous

    It’s interesting to sit back and watch the blogosphere revisit concepts that have been around for a while for the hyped web “2.0″ application d’jour. What ever happened to “as we look to the future, we should examine our past?”

    As an aside, remember the cumulative advantage story in the NYT? That perfectly explains the case of Twitter, where Leo & Scoble were primarily responsible for pushing it to stardom in the blogosphere.

    I do like that Tara was one of the early adopters who tried to find value in Twitter instead of randomly posting what you’re doing.

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 12:55 pm |
  • Jeremy Toeman

    “Currently, many companies are using Twitter for their service updates or company announcements”

    Is it “many”? Really? How about “some”? or “several”? or even “dozens” (which sounds high)?

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 3:43 pm |
  • Tara Hunt

    http://twitter.pbwiki.com/NonHumanNonIndividuals

    ;P

    I think I counted 67 accounted for…

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 3:52 pm |
  • Tara Hunt

    Um…which doesn’t count the news sites, the twitter apps (very recursive), etc.

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 3:53 pm |
  • Jeremy Toeman

    touche!

    but it’s still not “many”! :)

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 4:02 pm |
  • Tara Hunt

    Oh…your a big numbers guy, then. How many is many for you?

    Many is a handful for me.

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 4:13 pm |
  • Neil Ford

    I believe Tara may have been using the Kender scale of counting:

    “One, two, some, many”

    :)

    - Neil.

    Posted April 17, 2007 at 4:35 pm |
  • (un)relaxeddad

    Re twitter and company paranoia - ranting at a small conference we ran for grad recruiters earlier today about social networking tools/web ‘2′ sense-making tools and so on and one woman commented how she wasn’t allowed to look at ANY websites without applying in writing! The excuse is terrorism, viruses etc. The reality is the ongoing addiction of so many corporate IT departments to a panoptical view of the world.

    Posted April 19, 2007 at 11:32 am |
  • Tim Lucas

    So how are you imagining they send the data back once you’ve sent out the tweet “request”? Direct messgage? I couldn’t imagine they’d do a directed tweet (e.g. “@missrogue: Lulu SF: 123 22nd St”) because when usage grows it’d be too much noise.

    Posted April 20, 2007 at 9:13 pm |

One Trackback

  1. By Speaker City » links for 2007-05-21 on May 21, 2007 at 6:43 pm

    [...] ::HorsePigCow:: marketing uncommon » Twitter as your Command Line Interface Command line for Twitter (tags: cli commad webcli) [...]

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