Astronaut TJ Creamer just tweeted from space, marking the very first extraterrestrial tweet. The blogosphere is abuzz with the news, falling over themselves trying to spin the news bite into lengthy articles.
This sort of publicity is short lived and superficial. Long has Twitter lived on the wave of hype surrounding the product. This brought Twitter its months of gigantic growth, with millions flocking to the site. That has changed, and that is why Twitter has a serious problem.
Twitter grew by bringing the curious, media consuming types to the website, and getting them to sign up on the strength of its hype in the traditional and electronic media. What seems to have happened is that all of those people have come to the site, and the ones that enjoy the service have stayed. The others have left. Put simply, Twitter seems to have tapped out the easy-growth demographics.
As we have now seen, new account creation on Twitter has dried up. Even more so, I still get 503 error messages, fail whales, and other assorted problems daily. The site is broken, the service still crashes, it has lost nearly all its growth momentum, and has yet to monetize outside of two commercial deals. Oh, that and the Twitter spam problem has not even begun to be corrected.
And what are we all talking about? One poorly typed Tweet from outer space. Is that what we should be focusing on? What about Twitter still being broken? What about these traffic graphs showing Twitter completely stagnant in its home market:
These problems are huge, and Twitter seems to be doing little to fix them. Aside from a half-assed attempt to fix the Suggested User List, Twitter has done little to make the services simpler for new users, more powerful for advanced users, more stable for all users, and more transparent for business users. A handful of minor changes does not a product fix when it has serious, deep issues.
Twitter still has nearly endless potential, but it seems to be squandering it. Twitter has the funding, staff, advisers, investors, and dedicated core users that any other company would dream of, and they brought us a broken, downgrade of a retweet function. Hell, we actually had to invent that for them to begin with. Lists were nice, but it is hardly a core product for the mass market user.
Twitter took for granted its growth, and never focused. Twitter search is still one tenth what it could be. Twitter.com is nothing compared to what teams of a few guys in a basement have hacked together. The community that built Twitter can move on to something else. Twitter needs to focus on growth, stability, and developing its core product.
And they can, if they had someone at the helm who can find a direction for the company. We won’t always build it for you Twitter, sometimes you need to do it yourself. The web interface is the most popular among casual users, your growth market. Get to making it work.















The only new followers I get are auto keyword spam followers, or it is some social marketing guy/girl that came to the conclusion that hey should do something with Twitter. But they don't come any further then spamming me with there rss feeds or boring company news, they are just doing something but have no idea what to do…
I never thought Twitter is a good site I think the idea is good but the site just sucks.
Yesterday I even saw that an @reply didn't even made it in my @reply section, But searching my twitter name did find it, really how the hell can you screw a simple database search up?
I've said before that Twitter is the beeper of social media. But the difference is it's software, so it can be improved and saved from irrelevance. They just have to do it before it's too late. Good article.
Nice to see you turned what NASA and a dedicated few Astronauts have been working hard towards with regards to public outreach (its working – people are talking about the ISS, even if its just over this) into a tale of how bad Twitter is.
Astronaut and US Army Colonel Timothy 'TJ' Creamer deserves a little more respect that this article, as does the NASA team – you failed to mention that the technology being used is a first for the ISS with real-time internet access also allowing Astronauts to have greater access to family and friends on earth.
It is not so much about Twitter, its just a means to an end, and if people that normally have no interest in the space program, the ISS and NASA are suddenly talking about it, even for a few hours, its doing its job regardless what a handful of bloggers think.
I second Andrea Newson's comment: You just turned a great achievement for ISS Expedition 22, especially Astronaut Creamer's achievement, which is a means to directly access the Internet (not just Twitter) from the International Space Station, into criticism for Twitter. I also believe they (and by they, I mean not just NASA and their astronauts, but the rest of the international partners' space agencies who also play a part in ISS activities) deserve more respect than having their achievements used like this.
Twitter has its downs, and I'm not denying that. I've had problems with Twitter recently and I'm not too happy about it either, and I agree with you that Twitter has the potential, but they aren't doing zip to really make it shine. BUT I just find it inappropriate to be soiling something that has been attempted for a while, finally being achieved by our astronauts up there so they're able to have more direct access to their families and friends, just because they happened to use Twitter to post their achievement.
Your thoughts here were well crafted, but what you left out is the value existing businesses already put into Twitter. How often do you hear newscasters tell you to check them out on Twitter, see Twitter sign on advertisements in magazines. Despite their woes – the world has put some emotional stock into the commercial value of Twitter.
Of the problems you talk about, I had a collosal one myself. After having built a nice targeted following of 9,000+ twitterers, they all disappeared one day. On another day I found a hacker sending out porn tweets from my account and then on another my profile pic was missing for a week. I got so frustrated that I turned the solutions to those problems into a report I called TwitterGlitch where I list all the things you have to do to get your problems fixed.
I'm not sure the problem is Twitter – because as a free service by a capitalist company – they can do what they want. The problem is putting your eggs into that basket without a plan should the basket fall.
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