Twitter and the Crystal Goblet

, , , , — Rebecca Cottrell on April 3, 2008 at 9:28 pm

Twitter is the closest thing I’ve seen to the “crystal goblet” idea applied to social networking. ‘The Crystal Goblet’ was an essay on printing by Beatrice Warde which discusses the idea that printing should be invisible; that printed words should do their best to communicate the information instead of standing in the way of it, so that the “vintage of the human mind” isn’t spoiled by swirling ampersands and looping descenders.

Ideas printed in a book and means of networking with people online are entirely different things, but I really like the idea that some of the principles in Warde’s essay could be applied to social networking. Most basically, online services should be as transparent and camouflaged to human need as much as possible. Search is a good example: Google has become like the Helvetica of the internet.

Twitter’s character limitation has endowed each character you type into the box with extra value, as there are only 140 you could use. Twitter is naturally integrated into life, being very location-centric. In the past week I could have joined a friend in a cafe, an impromptu picnic, or a party, based on information shared on Twitter. Twitter is basically transparent to conversation, limited to 140 characters. 140 characters is the perfect length: long enough for a sentence or a question, and anything longer belongs somewhere else (which is why Twitter hasn’t completely replaced my need to blog).

The social dynamics are different from instant message, if you bring followers into consideration. It’s a hybrid forum-im-social network, which gives it a lot of power, and a lot of potential. The main problem for Twitter is that at the moment it seems to appeal mainly to geeks, while Facebook has wide appeal for everyone. Maybe it’ll take longer for its appeal to spread, and it’s still in an early adoption period…

2 Comments »

  1. I think you are spot on here, I’d love to read the essay, can you link to it?

    The fact that Facebook dropped the “is” from the Status Updates box, and have now cheekily added ‘What are you doing right now?’ to the, much more visible, input box on the new designs is a sign that they know that micro-blogging is only going to get bigger.

    As more and more blogs get abandoned more and more are turning to quick social snapshots and updates.

    Twitter are spending a fortune on SMS messaging at the moment, I read “$1000 per user per year” today, and I’m still not sure how they’re going to make money.

    My predication for 2009 - “Facebook buys Twitter”

    Comment by Michael Rose — August 14, 2008 @ 4:43 pm
  2. I find myself rephrasing my messages until they fit. Twitter forces you to be concise… which is good.

    Comment by Edward — August 29, 2008 @ 2:27 pm

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© Rebecca Cottrell 2009 | @rivalee