Twitter Tips: Seesmic Desktop an alternative to TweetDeck
- 26 August, 2009 02:56
- Comments
Although TweetDeck remains one of the most popular desktop applications for Twitter, Seesmic Desktop has provided users with an alternative. It touts many similar features, including the ability to group certain followers into their own tidy window panes, multi-account management and integration with Facebook. Also like TweetDeck, Seesmic runs on Adobe AIR, which allows you to run Rich Internet Applications (RIAs) on your desktop.
Full-disclosure: I use TweetDeck to manage my personal Twitter account. As such, the thoughts in this review will relate to how Seesmic compares. In general, the two apps operate in a very similar fashion. The decision to use one instead of the other might be one of design preference and what pieces of functionality are the most important to you.
Adding Users to Groups: Too Complicated
Seesmic allows you to create customized groups, such as "My friends" or "My colleagues." To create one, you simply click on the "+" sign next to "user groups" on the left navigation bar. But you might find that adding users to your customized groups is a chore.
You can add people in two ways. One is to find a tweet recently posted. When you scroll your mouse above someone's Twitter avatar, you can click on a wheel symbol and choose "add to user list." This can be a good way to serendipitously add users later. But it's ineffective if the person hasn't tweeted anything recently and you want to add right away.
For this scenario, you must search in the window pane that shows your Twitter handle. At the bottom, you will see a console that says "Home." To the right, you will see a "Lookup" button, which allows you to launch a search bar and type in a user name.
Sound complicated? It is at first. If nothing else, it's annoying when compared to how easy this process is on TweetDeck. With TweetDeck, after you elect to create a new group, your entire follower list pops up, and you have the ability to choose users simply by searching and checking off their names.
Tweeting
When tweeting a message, Twitter users like to shorten links and upload pictures. Seesmic helps users perform this task well, and it gives them lots of choices. It integrates with a variety of URL shortening services, including Bit.ly, digg, is.gd, snurl, tr.im and twurl. For pictures, it works with the popular twitpic, as well as twitgoo and mobypicture.
The tweet box spans the width of the Seesmic app, and has clear "add URL" and "add image" controls. It also features a nice "shrink text" option that will, for instance, turn "I am" into "I'm" and "with" into "w/." While TweetDeck also features these options, they're listed as small buttons that aren't as aesthetically pleasing. Seesmic looks better here.
Searching
Seesmic and TweetDeck operate in a similar way as it concerns Twitter search. On both services, when you search a term, you'll see a window pane displaying the results.
On TweetDeck, within that pane, you have a button that enables you to "filter results" by searching for another term within the results. Unfortunately, Seesmic lacks this function.
But I do like the fact Seesmic bakes a search bar into the main interface (upper right corner). And it lists your searches on the left navigation bar for convenient access later.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- TweetDeck
- The Top 21 Twitter Applications (According to Compete)
- Seesmic · Build Your Community
- rich Internet applications : Adobe AIR
- Twitter Tips: TweetDeck App Gets You Organized, Automated - CIO.com - Business Technology Leadership
- bit.ly, a simple url shortener
- digg
- is.gd URL Shortener - The Shortest URLs Around
- Snipurl / Snurl / Snipr / Sn.im - Snippetty snip snip with your looong URLs ...Short URL goodness since 2001
- tr.im your URLs
- twurl
- Twitpic - Share photos on Twitter
- Twitgoo - Share your pictures on twitter
- Mobypicture - Share your adventures with your friends realtime
- Twitter Tips: How To Search Twitter Smarter - CIO.com - Business Technology Leadership
- Facebook Connect: What's Next for Your Facebook Info? - CIO.com - Business Technology Leadership
-
Phones are distractions during catch-ups
-
Google's Sidewiki lets people post comments about Web pages
-
Leaving your job? Take your data with you
-
Australia's first 4G smartphone is the HTC Velocity 4G
-
Social networking, ignorance, and apathy
-
Spear Phishing Attacks - Why they are successful and how to stop them
There's been a rapid shift from broad, scattershot attacks to advanced target attacks that have had serious consequences for victim organisations. The increased use of spear phishing is directly related to the fact that it works, as traditional security defences simply do not stop these types of attacks. This paper provides a detailed look at how spear phishing is used within advanced attacks and the key capabilities organisations need in order to effectively combat these emerging and evolving threats. -
Cloud printing in the enterprise: liberating the mobile print experience from cables, operating systems and physical boundaries
In recent years mobile technology has proliferated throughout the enterprise. Today, virtually no one in the workforce is bound to a desk to work, check e-mail or communicate with co-workers and customers. At the same time, we’re seeing the rise of cloud technologies, loosely defined as online resources, often provided as a service, that manage the data and software that used to run solely on PCs. This merger of mobile and cloud technologies is on its way to becoming one of most significant enablers of business productivity and innovation seen in the past decade. Read more. -
A Data Center Fabric Is Critical to a Next-Generation Unified Data Center
The data center has gone through several major evolutionary changes over the past several decades, and each change has been defined by major shifts in computing. The shift to a virtual data center will be the single biggest transition in the history of computing. This transition will reshape all the major data center tiers: applications, storage, servers and the network. This paper examines the drivers of this transition, provides real-world case studies and includes data centre fabric best practices.
-
Sas for Dummies®, 2nd Edition
-
Social Media Marketing for Dummies®
-
Windows Vista Sidebar
-
Next Generation of Data-mining Applications
-
Systems Analysis and Design 3E
-
Final Cut Pro 4 Complete Course
-
Object Management Architecture Guide, 3rd Edition
-
Pattern-oriented Software Architecture V 4 - a Pattern Language for Distributed Computing
-
Adobe® Atmosphere(tm) Bible








Comments
Post new comment