Twitter Tools For Beginners

There are a number people I know that are just starting Twitter-ing and often ask me how to cut through the noise and get to the meat of utilizing the service. So I’ve compiled a list of items to get you started in your venture.
Desktop
Twhirl is a great client to get you going in the Twitterverse. It’s small and fluid, it integrates replies and direct messages into your stream, and offers many features. Other tools like TweetDeck and Seesmic Desktop clutter your screenspace and don’t feel as fluid. Another great client is DestroyTwitter. Also check out my earlier post on the best Twitter Desktop Clients.
Mobile
Mobile is hard because everyone has a different phone. For the iPhone (I don’t have one, but) TwitterFon is popular amoungst my friends although many say purchasing Tweetie is worth the price. For Blackberry fanatics, I use UberTwitter almost exclusively now. It has everything I need in a mobile client and is pretty fast. For Windows Mobile phones Twikini seems to be a popular choice. You also can use the mobile site or text message all your updates.
@Replies Notification
Early on Twitter had a track feature that you could put in your username and anytime someone mentioned your username you’d get an email or text with the message. This was a great feature but was turned off a while back. I can get my replies in relative real time using Notify.me. By adding the rss feed for a Twitter search “http://search.twitter.com/search.atom?q=@<USERNAME>” and replacing <USERNAME> with your username, and setting the delivery method, you’ll get alerts every time someone responds to you.
Mutli-site Integration
So you want your Tweets to go to multiple sites, maybe Facebook, Jaiku, Identi.ca, Plurk, MySpace, FriendFeed, Brightkite, and more? Well Facebook can do this automatically with the Twitter app. But Ping.fm allows you update all your services at once (Twhirl has Ping.fm integration). This way all your social networking services are updated you your latest status.
Blog Integration
You’ll want to tell your followers when you’ve updated your blog. There are a number of ways to do this. Many of them (ie Twitterfeed) require a time interval between checking your feed, so your post can be there for hours and hours before your friends are notified. My solution (of course if you are using Tumblr just have Tumblr update your friends) is using Notify.me, you can have Notify.me hit your Ping.fm account and the world knows you’ve posted. If you want a prefix on your post then you can use this Yahoo!Pipe I create: Feed Title Prefixer. This way you can prefix something like: “New Blog Post:” to your Twitter update. This makes it near instantaneous (longest it’s been is about 20 mins, but often within minutes).
For integrating Twitter into your blog (as opposed to above) a great service is called TwitterRemote. It logs your Twitter visitors, if they are logged into TwitterRemote. It’s just now picking up steam, but is looking at good growth. Also, Twitter offers some great widgets that you can put on your blog that lists your latest Tweets.
Better Follower Emails
Twitter’s notification of people following you are terrible. Topify fixes this. Simply put they take your emails, find out information about the user following you and then fills a nice email with this information. You’ll be able to spot a Twitter Spammer a mile away. If you can’t find any invites let me know or @Topify know they’re very accomodating.
Twitter Tools
There are some great tools on Twitter as well. TwitterBacks can help you get an awesome background. @TrackThis can track packages for you. @Questions will answer any question you may have. @Sngtwt allows you to post a song to Twitter. @TwitPic provides a service for posting images, I prefer Posterous though…you can post more than one image in a single posting and it’s super easy. @Woot will tell you their latest item for sale (One Sale, One Day). @AmazonMP3 has the daily cheap mp3 deals for you.
There’s much much more and this only scratches the surface. But it’s a good way to get you started. Let me know if you have other tools that are much better!

