This morning I woke up to find that Twitter was down. They tell you in a really cute way, with a little "fail whale" – it's so sweet. But why is this lack of reliability tolerated by governments, large corporations, emergency workers, and other serious people?
Mashable.com reports that the best theory for the downtime was a deluge of tweets caused by a second Haiti earthquake. A second earthquake in Haiti? No offense to Haiti, that is a horrible situation, but imagine if we had a really, really serious situation (say, the Pentagon the Golden Gate Bridge get hit by drones controlled by terrorists) – could you rely on Twitter?
I'm still surprised that no serious competitor to Twitter has arisen. Sure, someone like Google or Microsoft or others could just buy it, but they'd at present be purchasing an unreliable product with questionable customer service and a cute children's language and a steep learning curve.
Where's the competitive product for 50 year old insurance salesmen? For UN relief workers?
Sure, Twitter could improve. I use it. I don't really want to see them fail. But if, as they claim, they want to make it "communications infrastructure" (a lofty goal to think they will be the next AT&T), then it needs to be decentralized and partially redundant. Email doesn't just "go down" and neither does RSS. People like Dave Winer can write much better about this than I can, but here's one brief post by entrepreneur Andrew Baron about decentralizing Twitter for you.
Two years ago, when I first started using Twitter to study its use for the government, I thought that it was a great new tool which was potentially useful for unified communications in a crisis. Two years later, little has changed. It's useful when it works.






















January 20th, 2010 at 5:28 pm
Open source, distributed microblogging is being worked on here:
http://status.net (formerly Laconi.ca)
Not sure if this fits your requirements (yet) but worth checking out for sure.
January 23rd, 2010 at 9:15 pm
I thought this was going to be another long boring blog post, but I was pleasantly suprised. I will be posting a backlink on my blog, as I am quite sure my readers will find this more than interesting.
February 1st, 2010 at 9:40 pm
hi
February 2nd, 2010 at 2:29 am
Hi how are you i really liked this.
February 2nd, 2010 at 7:43 am
Hello. This is kind of an “unconventional” question , but have other visitors asked you how get the menu bar to look like you’ve got it? I also have a blog and am really looking to alter around the theme, however am scared to death to mess with it for fear of the search engines punishing me. I am very new to all of this …so i am just not positive exactly how to try to to it all yet. I’ll just keep working on it one day at a time Thanks for any help you can offer here.
February 2nd, 2010 at 7:02 pm
Saw your Blog bookmarked on Reddit.I love your site and marketing strategy.