Showing posts with label twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label twitter. Show all posts

Celebrity Tweets from Ximad: be social

Social networks became the part of our every day life. And we like it. A fan of Twitter Universe?
So, Celebrity Tweets from XIMAD is created specially for your desire to be aware of what's going on there. Do you know the top ten Twitterholics? Lady Gaga, Britney Spears, Ashton Kutcher, Justin Bieber, Barack Obama and other celebs with world famous names. It's so inspiring to know the latest news from the rich and famous. Especially, it's important if you're one of thier fans. E.g. looking for one more way to discover new facts about Alicia Keys or the latest news about the whole world of NBA – Celebrity Tweets will help you. Over 300 authentic profiles from world's Celebrities to Politicians...

Besides it gives the all the latest news feeds from CNN, BBC and others! It's convinient – the media content in one app – students, it'll be of some assistence at your studies. This app will keep you up to date with their tweets.


Some features more: just add your friends to your Favorites and find out the latest news about thier activity. A splendid opportunity for those who's too busy to communicate with all his friends every day but want to help with a good advice or share important news about his lifestyle.

Cool and easy to use interface give more pleasant moments when using the application.

Do you want to experience it on your Symbian S60 5th mobile (Nokia 5800 XpressMusic, N97, N97 Mini, X6, 5230, 5233, 5235 and 5530 XpressMusic) ?

Feel free to follow the link:
http://store.ovi.com/content/22755?clickSource=search#/content/22755/reviews



Related Posts:

Twitterfeed

I am testing Twitterfeed tonight, lets see if this post will make it to my twitter account via RSS

Checking in on smartphone and Twitter usage

Over at Rubicon, we just did a quick consumer survey to check the status of a couple of hot topics in the tech industry, smartphone adoption and use of Twitter. I thought you might be interested. Here's a summary of what we found, and links to the full articles:

Smartphone adoption: RIM leads. In the US, about 10%-11% of the adult population uses smartphones. RIM has just under half of the installed base, followed by Apple at about a quarter.

The users of different types of smartphone have different feature priorities. iPhone users rate web browsing as their #1 feature, followed closely by e-mail. RIM users rank e-mail the most important feature, Palm users choose calendar, and Google phone users are partial to mapping. The profile for Windows Mobile users is similar to RIM's, but less enthusiastic about e-mail.


Mobile phone feature priorities of iPhone users compared to all mobile phone users. Percent of US users ranking a feature in their top four.

I think this is more evidence of something that I've been saying for a while -- most people buy phones more like they do appliances than like computers. They decide which functions are most important to them, and then pick the phone that does those things best, rather than looking for the best general-purpose device.

That's not to say that flexibility doesn't matter at all, but it's secondary. For example, adding third party apps is the #4 priority among iPhone users, and close to tied with several other features. It will be interesting to see how the priority evolves as Apple continues to advertise the daylights out of the app store.

For the full article, click here.

Twitter is a form of entertainment. Usage of Twitter is rising very rapidly -- as of April, it gets more daily visitors than cnn.com in the US, according to Alexa.com.

Our survey showed that the Twitter user base has more than doubled in the last six months. About 10% of US computer users have tried Twitter so far, and about a third of those people have stopped using it. You can decide for yourself if that's a big number or not, but a certain amount of churn is inevitable in any new web service.


Twitter awareness and usage among US PC users.

Most Twitter users say they are casual users of the service, and that it doesn't play an important part of their personal or business lives. The most active 10% of Twitter users say it does play an important role in their personal lives, but not in their business lives.

The overall pattern of usage indicates that for most people Twitter is currently a form of casual entertainment. There's nothing wrong with that, but the future of Twitter will depend on how that usage pattern evolves. Will Twitter become as important as e-mail, or will it be a fad like citizens' band radio (link)? It's too early to tell. But it's already clear that it's a separate medium with its own rules. Companies looking to use Twitter should make sure they understand how it's used; it's not the same as blogging.

For the full article, click here.

New Twitter Design for The Mobile Experience


Check out the new Twitter.com/MobilExperience background design.  We opted for a clean look similar to our block background design. We'll continue to post random updates all things mobile on there to compliment this blog.