There’s a bit of unrest among the Twitter natives. The service is up and it’s down and…it is what it is.

What it is to me - I’ve been using for almost 2 years, and as I’ve said I’ve been on long enough to fall in love and out of love and back in love with it. Now 2x over. I also wrote a response to a Brian Solis post about how disappointed I was in their handling of certain seeming violations in their Terms of Service. Then I felt guilt about piling on without knowing both sides of the story.

was - almost - the first (anyone remember Dodgeball?) and despite scaling issues have done it better than anyone else. is pretty much done (Is Google the place where Web 2.0 apps go to die? ? Delicious? Dodgeball?) with no movement since the acquisition. But now there are new option seemingly every day, Plurk, identi.ca and Posterous among them. FriendFeed is a big favorite among early adopters, with the opportunity to have longer conversations and comments for each of you and your friends items.

There are also push services, like Ping.fm and BlogIt, which can push status updates and blog posts to a number of services at the same time. Personally, I feel weird about that. I have many “friends” across the different services and it feels like I’m spamming them instead of concentrating on delivering unique content. My issues, not yours ;)

(and Facebook) is where the my conversations are and where I’ve met people who have become personally important to me. There are talented people, who I’ll never meet, who I look at their pages each day. I’ve had job interviews and opportunities because of and have met a ton of smart people who I now count as friends (or collegues). I check in to , I look at the other services I’m on - but those are appointment check-ins, not integrated into my daily workflow.

In fact - I still can’t get excited about Plurk - and I know plenty of people who are. I just can’t get past the interface (again, my issue!) and the whole karma point system makes no sense to me. Many of my connections love it and I plan on checking in every once in a while - it’s just not for me. On the other hand, I’m enjoying Posterous and the simplicity of emailing all of my updates, pictures, etc. It’s easy and fast.

Do the down times disturb me? More of a gentle to general state of annoyance. Do I wish they would set their business model? Uh, yeah (I’m sure they can’t wait to do that too). But I love the service and the team - both of which have changed the daily way I communicate with the world. And have brought me opportunities and people in my life that I would have never had before .

(And BTW - it’s still FREE!).

Related posts

Thanks to my FriendFeed, I saw a blog entry from about .

Disqus.com

Disqus adds threaded comments to your blog, instead of the usual inline comments and or using the @convention. This has been a nagging annoyance of mine - threaded comments makes for understandable conversation flow. It’s hard to interact when every new comment seems to start a new point and conversation, even if it’s an actual reply.

replaces the existing comment structure with their own (hosted) solution. Once I uploaded and activated the plugin it took me only a few moments to set everything up - I was worried about losing existing comments and checking the “entries with no comments and future posts” option left everything intact. I then went to the Disqus website to set up my profile and enable my settings.

In his post, says that the number of comments and interaction on his blog has gone up five to tenfold. I tweeted about installing and immediately got a response from Daniel Ha (co-founder), who pointed me to this FAQ page.

features:

  • Integrates with your blog
  • Receive/reply to comments by email or SMS
  • You can subscribe to conversations
  • Moderate and block unwanted comments/commenters
  • Very customizable

works with a number of blogging platforms including WordPress, TypePad, Movable Type, Blogger and Tumblr (my next site!). Sites that have implemented (according to the post, there are over 10,000 blogs) include Fake Steve Jobs, Scripting News, Rev2.org and, of course, A VC.

I’m looking forward to seeing what impact has on the conversations on my blog and will update with any significant impact.

Other posts on this topic:

UPDATE: ReadWriteWeb’s Corvida compares SezWho to Disqus and Intense Debate

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Hi, I'm Jane Quigley, Relationship Director for crayon. Social Days is a reflection of my own opinions and perspective only. For more information on me, please see my "About" page.