Twitter Chat Horse Race: Which Tool Kicks Apps?

I wrote a post for the Social Fluency blog yesterday that relates my recent experience in participating in a 
Horse-racing-2

Twitter chat.

I used several programs simultaneously to keep up with the flow of the dialog.  Here is an excerpt, please visit the link above to read the entire post.

After studying the advice in the Handshake 2.0 post in detail, I
readied the apps for the upcoming chat. TweetDeck was easy – just add a
search column with the appropriate hashtag. TweetChat, a Web-based
tool, required no client side app or plug-in and was also very simple to
sign up for. HootSuite, also a Web app, has a rich interface that lets
you set up a page for monitoring a chat, with separate columns in which
you can follow each participant.

Twitter is very democratic in that it treats each tweet the same.
The disadvantage is that it can be hard to follow the flow of a
discussion.  Replies contain no reference to the original post, apart
from the originating user’s Twitter name (for a new micro blogging
platform that excels at organizing conversations, see FriedEggs). So, I
thought HootSuite could solve this problem by grouping Tweets from the
same user into different columns.

TweetDeck, the one client-side app I used, had the advantage of a
pop-up window that surfaces relevant tweets as they occur.

The clock ticked inexorably toward 9pm, when the chat was supposed to
start.  As I got ready to jump in, I was of course very focused on the
subject matter, and keen to participate and learn.  But the geek and PR
guy in me wondered. which app would win the “horse race.”

Although all apps had their advantages – between tweets I was able to
switch among them – I found TweetChat to be quickest in posting
updates.  Also, it automatically added the hashtag to every Tweet (the
most common mistake with Twitter chats is to leave out the hashtag,
according to Kelly’s advice).

Although in other aspects, it has fewer bells and whistles, TweetChat
is obviously purpose-built for Twitter chats, and I found that it
worked the best.

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2 Responses to Twitter Chat Horse Race: Which Tool Kicks Apps?

  1. Bob, I agree with your review of these tools. Tweetchat is my tool of choice when using only one chat tool. A Twitter chat puts me in super-geek mode and I find I thrive best on using two monitors and multiple tabs, all of which are handy if you’re the moderator or a super-twitter-chat-geek. Thanks again for participating in the first #CampusChat!

  2. rgeller says:

    Kelly, your forum was a great learning (and tweeting and blogging) experience for me, thanks again for inviting me, and for your comment.

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