3 Twitter Web Apps You May Have Not Seen Yet - Twitt(url)y + The Twitter Blacklist + Twistori
Introduction
New web apps are coming out for Twitter all the time. Here are three web apps you may have not had the enjoyment of stumbling upon:
Twitt(url)y

Direct Link: Twitt(url)y
Product Page: Twitt(url)y
In their words:
“Twitt(url)y is a service for tracking what URLs people are talking about as they talk about them on Twitter.”
Kinda reminds me of Techmeme. Twitt(url)y does a nice job of cleanly organizing top tweeted links without any (noticeable) bugs. Hats off to the team for making a site that many others have tried to make.
The Twitter Blacklist

Direct Link: The Twitter Blacklist
Product Page: The Twitter Blacklist
In their words:
“This is a list of known spammers of various kinds on Twitter.”
Basic concept that is being used for the greater good. Loving the ratio guide since it quickly shows you who the worst spammers are. Actually, is it possible to have “worse” spammers? Yeah, I think, or at least guess so.
Twistori

Website Link: Twistori
Product Page: Twistori
In their words:
“This is the first step in an ongoing social experiment, based on twitter. inspired by wefeelfine and drawing data from summize, hand-crafted by amy hoy and thomas fuchs.”
Beautiful design! Great job Amy and Thomas! Not only is the design cool, but the concept is super original. Basically Twistori allows you to choose an emotion, and track tweets regarding that emotion. The integration of summize is extremely well done.
Conclusion
It is great to see more and more Twitter web apps being made. It is even better to know that the quality is not suffering due to the mass production of these apps and bots!
What do you think?
Do you find these apps useful? Which of these three is your favorite? Let me know in the comments section!
If you liked this post and want others to find it, Stumble it!
If you like this post and want to share it with your Twitter friends,
If you liked this post and want to see more on a daily basis get my posts via RSS

April 29th, 2008 at 1:26 pm
Blacklist is interesting, but Damiano is hardly a spammer. There are some definite relevancy and frequency over time metrics missing from these calculations. Take with a grain of salt.