Author: Daniel Sung
Five other ways Twitter could make money
Twitter has announced that it’s going to start charging cold, hard cash to use the service. If you haven’t already read the news this morning, then you might well be mid heart attack right now, so please read the next sentence before you clutch you upper arm and fall to the floor. They’re only talking about a paid-for pro service alternative and there will always be a free option.
Now, nobody’s quite sure how they’ll be running this pro service and, to be straight with you, I’m not sure it’s going to be enough anyway. So, I’ve devised five ways in which Twitter can make money out of regular users like me, just don’t tell them about it or they might actually happen – in which case, I’d like a free account and a cut of the profits, Twitter, or else I’ll get my non-existent lawyer on you.
1.)Companies must pay!
Come on, we all know it. Companies – whether they be big faceless corporations, media publishers and, yes, blogs of a non-personal nature – should pay. It’s a world of free, instant publicity and it’s very, very effective.
It’s rather harsh on the likes of small blogs and start ups trying to get a leg up in the world but it wouldn’t have to be a lot of cash. Gumtree doesn’t let companies post job ads for free any more and I could see some sort of £25 for the year price tag without too many businesses opting out after initial grumbles.
It could be a tricky system to police but Twitter could eventually get round to vetting accounts and I’m sure the threat of banning would be enough to get people to toe the line.
2.)Twitterfeeders must pay!
If companies are going to pay, then those who plough their RSS feeds straight into their accounts must certainly fork out too. It’d be one thing if it were a selection of the best stories and posts chosen with the love, care and a human touch but if you’re going to get a robot to spam out every word that you spout then, my friend, you must pay.
I’d be quite happy for people to get around this by manually inputting each link and Tweeting it off but that takes a bit more time and inconvenience and I reckon it might just be enough to make people reach into the coffers for another fiver a year.
3.)People who go over their daily usage must pay!
Currently, there is one very good way of dealing with someone who overtweets – stop following them, and believe me, I do. It’s empowering, isn’t it? But how much more satisfying would it be to know that they were actually having to pay for their verbal pollution?
I’m not talking about a low number here. I’m not talking about those with a 20-a-day habit. I mean the folk who are on the thing 24/7 from two separate handsets telling you their every movements with such gems as:
I’m gonna do me some emails and Today really is one of *those* days… – entertaining stuff, I’m sure we’ll all agree.
Of course, there is one way around this for the Twitter addict – multiple accounts, which leads me nicely onto my next point…
4)Multiple account users must pay!
There’s not a lot of reason to have a second account unless one of them is for some kind of commercial use in which case you should be paying anyway. There could be some kind of system whereby account one is free, number two is a £2.50 and the next a fiver and so on until either we’ve staunched an individual’s flow of verbal diarrhoea or those unable to stop our at least paying for supporting the service anyway.
N.B. The only exception to this rule should be the comedy accounts such as Street Fighter characters, starship captains, Dark Lords of the Sith and people’s anatomy.
5.)Word limit busters must pay!
This is, I think, the best of the five ideas for Twitter to make some cash. It could be a little off-putting to set up but it’s a stroke of genius.
Anyone who goes over the 140 per tweet limit should pay 1p for every extra character they use. On the one hand, this goes against the whole ethos of Twitter but then at least those transgressing the rules would be paying to do so.
Let’s say, Twitter has your credit card details or sends you a bill at the end of each month which you can pay automatically through PayPal or something. When you write a long Tweet, it logs how many you go over.
You do, of course, have the choice to go back and edit your tweet to get it to fit in but 95% of people are far too precious about their words to edit their copy rather than spend a 2p or so. It doesn’t cost an individual much but if every Twitter user did it just once, then that would be £3,460. (Figures are based on the number of followers of Stephen Fry, as everyone on Twitter follows Stephen Fry)…
Sony Ericsson T707 as seen on Maria Sharapova
Maria Sharapova is endorsing the Sony Ericsson T707. The handset is essentially a fairly fancy feature phone with a 2.2-inch screen, 3.2-megapixel camera (with a zoom of the same number) and the real selling point appears to be that it lights up in a different way depending up on who calls you.
The T707 has a battery life of up to 400 hours standby and 10 hours talk time, and you can do so over both the GPRS and HSDPA networks. There’s a fairly generous 100MB of internal memory but they’ll chuck in an M2 memory stick for your real storage solution.
The phone will do all the basic e-mail, uploading to the web and MMS that all feature phones just about manage these days. It measures 93mm x 50mm x 14.1mm, weighs 93g and can be yours’ as well as Maria’s’ on any network very soon.
Sony Ericsson
Wired UK launches
Wired magazine has launched the UK branch of their website this very day. If it’s anything like the US site, it’ll be full of lots of excellent pieces about everything from politics and culture to science and, yes, damn them, technology too. I also hear there’s a particularly good games section…
Diotek launches handwriting recognition Android app
I’ve been having a play with the G1 over the last week and it’s not the look of the thing that gets to me as the slightly too small slide-out QWERTY keyboard. Mercifully, Korean company Diotek is here to save the day for those fat fingered among us. They’ve invented the first Android handwriting recognition application…
YouTube Video of the Day: Creme that egg!
As I watched the first 15 seconds of this video, I was convinced it was an advert for Cadbury’s Creme Eggs. For the rest of the 2mins and 20secs, I was too busy wondering if my jaw was ever going to close again. Watch the clip and you’ll see what I mean…
Sony Bravia 2009: the greener WE5 & a closer look at the range
CES 2009 set the tempo for TV tech for the year. Whether intentionally or not, you could more or less have switched one manufacturer’s speech for another only with a different company logo behind them.
On the one hand, the global recession was a factor and, on the other, environmental meltdown. What this meant in consumer tech terms was that you could connect all new TVs to the internet; each company has a cleaner, greener way of putting their sets together and that no one showed off the new world’s biggest panel.
For us, we now have a sea of widget TV interfaces to work through until we’ve found the one that suits us best and a marsh of greenwashing shpeel to wade through until we can see if these machines will either save a) the planet, b) our wallets, or ideally, c) all of the above.
So when Sony invited the UK techno-scribblers to have a look at their 2009 Bravia range, I simply couldn’t refuse the excellent opportunity to stand in front of some panels scowling and pretending to be much less impressed than I actually am…
£969.99 Canon EOS 500D – 1080p video recording & 15.1-megapixel sensor
Canon has snuck out a DSLR in the States today that combines the processing power of the EOS 50D with the HD video recording of the 5D Mark II.
The slightly differently named Canon Rebel EOS T1i will shoot 1080p footage…
GALLERY: Samsung N110, N120, Q320 & R522 notebooks – two minis and two HD
Samsung is flinging out a set of four laptops from their lofty nest next month but they've had the thought to do so in pairs making sure that the little fledglings will not be all alone in the big, bad world.
Two are mini-notebooks and the others are 16:9 HD numbers…
SHINY VIDEO REVIEW: Nokia E63 'messaging device'
The Nokia E71 is probably the most cult successful smartphone currently on the market and, despite its business target market, it’s being enjoyed by consumers in the know the world over.
Just in case you missed it, though, Nokia has released the E63 – an ever so slightly downgraded version of the handset for the public to get to grips with. Lucy took a look at this latest offering to check that this mobile design still has what it takes.
OPINION: Why Google must say 'no' to the big publications
What a wind up! I’m saying that because I’m utterly wound up and it’s going to take me to write this semi-controlled tirade of editorial opinion on the subject of Google indexing to get myself ironed out again.
I know what you’re thinking. No, Google indexing does not sound like a good read nor anything worth getting passionate about, but trust me here. Stick with me a sec and I promise I’ll have your blood boiling by the end of the next para.