Thursday, December 31, 2009

Engagement Wishes For Best Friend

Twitter + TV

could have been facebook could have been Myspace or any social platform today, but Twitter has a simple that makes it quite attractive to many people. In general, it is a platform used by people older than 20 years with the purpose of sharing some interesting fact or simply mention "what is doing right now," the place where it is at the precise moment " , etc. The limitation is fairly simple: You can only write a message of no more than 140 characters. You can follow the "twitter" to whomever you want (unless the author has declared a "private"), as well any you may continue (unless declared to be private or simply block a user) ... Simple right? Now, 140 characters? What you can express with 140 characters? ... Itself only specific things.

Even with this limitation, journalists, athletes, artists have made Twitter a way to maintain closer contact with the "public," getting awesome feedback. To give an example: Many drivers of television programs (entertainers, journalists, etc) have a Twitter and receive instant information on how the public is perceiving the program, involving them fully of the same, on the side of the press, may have important data in real time any news that is occurring in a particular place, simply by "twit" of any citizen. Another example was

the period of elections in my country, where television channels received much information from the "Twitterers" to what happened in every city, every polling place throughout Chile, thus facilitating the work of journalists in the field .

are already many programs and Chilean television personalities who hold accounts with this popular social platform and, in turn, receive the feed back from their "public" and create a link to close the relationship between both parties. Television has ceased to be a unidirectional media, to be fully bidirectional. The audience can say, see, criticize about what is being exhibited in your screen simply and communicators can improve the quality of their programs ... all with a simple "Twit."

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