This is a huge annual event for bloggers and nonbloggers alike to «hop» around the blogosphere and find new blogs to follow,
new Twitterers to tweet with, and new Facebook pages to «Like».
Not exact matches
QPR's controversial Captain and compulsive
Twitterer, Joey Barton, posted his first tweet for eight days yesterday — a photograph of a very stylish looking
new haircut.
The problem wasn't micro-blogging per se, since some of the most prolific
twitterers were also some of the best, but BAD micro-bloggers can really fill up a page (if you haven't seen Twitter, it shows the most recent 140 - character messages from the people you follow,
newest messages first) and push much more relevant posts far down the list.
The ease of online self - publishing has created a whole
new class of «network influentials,» a category that includes national and state - level bloggers, prominent
Twitterers, individual activists with large personal networks and the administrators of sizable email lists — basically, anyone with a following.
That's the insight given by a
new technique for ranking
twitterers, which has been used to create a chart of the top 100 news - media Twitter feeds.
Our always - helpful friends at Amazon have dreamed up a
new thing for
Twitterers (or is it Tweeple?)
Other
twitterers will respond to other people, not a picture of some unknown
new book.