I can't think of any thing that twitter does that cannot be done at
least as effectively by something already out there.
On Jun 7, 2009, at 2:30 PM, Ana Garza wrote:
I like the shared conversation aspect of Twitter. Last December I
attended a
national conference on literature and language. One of the presenters
discussed using Twitter to make communal art. In one instance, a group
of
slammers, rapper-like poets who tend to improvise, asked audience
members to
tweet words, lines, and ideas; the tweets were then projected on
screens for
the performers to riff from. In another instance, an artist was able to
project an image onto a building wall; the image had spaces for text,
and
passersby could tweet improvised lines of poetry into the image. This,
by no
means, cancels out the sensability and craft of an individual artist,
but it
may possibly yield a more honest product. Think of all the awful books
that
have been written about blind people, who generally come off as
pathetic in
some way. If the sighted writer of the next such book were to elicit
tweets
from a bunch of blind people, s/he may develop a mor balanced character.
On a more practical plane, I'm actually thinking about updating my
cellphone
to one that supports a screen reader for a couple of reasons. First, I
find
that I'm starting to need to use text messaging for work. Second, as a
freelancer, I can imagine using Twitter to let my regulars know
whether I'm
free and available or not. Most of the people I know who use Twitter
do it
for practical reasons, to remind each other that they need to stop by
the
grocery store on the way home, to contact coworkers about a job related
issue, to communicate about an upcoming event.
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