This article borders on ridiculous.<p>I unfollowed the so-called 'power users' a long time ago. People like Chris Brogan, Scoble, Guy Kawasaki, etc. There was too much noise and not enough signal.<p>For my own uses, I couldn't possibly follow 1000 people. I would much prefer to follow a smaller number of people and be able to read all their tweets. I currently follow around 300, most of whom tweet a handful of times each day. Following 1000 people who update dozens of times each day doesn't seem like it's scalable. You would either have to ignore 90% of what you saw, or spend the majority of your day watching Twitter.<p>The fact that Twitter employees use Twitter in the same way that most of their users use Twitter is not worth complaining about. It's exactly what you would expect. The fact that a handful of people (ab)use Twitter and take it to extremes doesn't mean that anyone else needs to.<p>This sort of article is exactly why tech reporting gets a bad rap.
I am both disturbed and scared by the tone of this article. This user seems to possess both a sense of entitlement to using Twitter in a manner that the developers did not intend, and an expectation that his usage patterns (and even his worldview regarding social behavior) are somehow either "normal" or "ideal." People with this level of gregariousness in real life terrify me, because they inevitably try to get over-involved in your life or disregard the entire concept of privacy.<p>People like should them just <i>go away.</i> Some of us like to keep to ourselves, and choose who we associate with, thank you very much!
<i>That's just a part of it for many of the rest of us; people also use it for serious business, for research, for alerting the public at large about important news</i><p>I can tell you right now, whatever those people think they're doing on Twitter, it is neither serious nor important.
This story is ridiculously stupid (and this is coming from someone who makes a service that favored well in this review: Tipjoy).<p>If anything, twitter is defined by making as open a system as possible, and letting the community decide how to use it. I think that's awesome.<p>It also makes it completely irrelevant how the employees themselves use it.
Just had an idea, create a service, like a google/reader for different twitter accounts you create. then create one for technology, news, friends + family etc... a feature would be of course to have a few pre made profiles you could start out with and edit<p>-
"Twitter employees don't follow very many other people."<p>That's very unusual behavior on Twitter. Most people on staff are being followed by more than 1,000 people<p>Complete non-sequitur
I wonder if the author of this article has noticed the correlation between "people who don't use twitter all that much" (ie, the staff at twitter) and "people who actually get things done" (ie, the staff at twitter).<p>I cannot imagine how anyone with a job manages the kind of usage the author seems to expect at a minimum, unless your job title is "Twitter User". Words are kind of failing me contemplating that point, actually. Who are these people who can <i>afford</i> to use Twitter all day every day, and still somehow remain in the technocracy?