First off, let me thank Jeff, KE9V, for bringing this to the front burner in my mind. It’s been simmering in the back for a while but I’ve never sat down and wrote about it. Jeff shot me a message today telling me that I should write and entry about it as the “lead Twitter-Ham” (Mental note: Get that on a business card.)
The problem is simple. On twitter there are two ways to reference another twit, a reply and a mention. The difference is subtle, but it’s kind of important. First, if I start off my message with an @ and a username, it’s a reply. Twitiquette states that replies are usually used when addressing someone directly or replying to something they said via the reply feature on Twitter. For example:
@kd0bik Loved this week’s Practical Radio Amateur podcast!
A mention on the other hand is usually just a reference to someone inside a mention, not a message directly to them, but something that they may wish to know about:
Received an interesting e-mail from @ke9v discussing Twitter replies versus mentions.
Now, why are replies an mentions important? By mentioning someone in a message, that message gets displayed on their replies page or depending on if they’re using a 3rd party client, highlighted someway. For example, I use twhirl, and when someone does a reply or mention, it alerts me with a different sound and it highlights the tweet.
Now, why are replies and mentions different? Simple. Twitter has certain rules when displaying replies for your followers. If I do a reply to @ke9v, it will only show up in the stream, aka that list of tweets on your homepage of twitter, of people who follow @ke9v. If people aren’t following Jeff, it won’t show up. No big deal right? Well, for the most part, yes. However, this has interesting implications consider the following tweets:
@ke9v @ka3ddr @kd0bik #followfriday
@kd0bik has a great podcast! Everyone interested in Ham Radio should listen to it!
What’s wrong with those? Normally, I would want both these messages to go out to everyone that follows me. However, because I prefixed it with a @ and a username, it will only show up to people who are already following that user. Whoops. However, these are both simple to fix:
#followfriday @ke9v @ka3ddr @kd0bik
Wow! @kd0bik has a great podcast! Everyone interested in Ham Radio should listen to it!
These are just two examples, however, it’s a good rule to be mindful of when tweeting: If you’re not replying to someone, you should try to stay away from starting your message with a @ and a username, otherwise, it may not reach as many people as you want it to.