yeah I guess I should be writing details huh? This is subjective of course. Seems like everyone is working on the same thing: adding groups/lists and handling different media types. So I don't see anyone with a clear advantage. I happen to use TweetDeck coz I think it fits me best but I'm not happy with that one either. It is better for me than Brizzly because it's a desktop app, which I happen to prefer at the moment. My fear about web apps is that there is no clear winner and they're competing directly with Twitter's interface. If Twitter adds user groups/lists (as they're doing, right?) and then media handling, then the time invested in using Brizzly or other similar web apps will be wasted coz I'd want to go back to the reference implementation. These calculations all take into account who's more likely to stick around in the long term.
- Huy Zing
Ah, then I think we're in full agreement on all counts! I was also quite underwhelmed by Brizzly, but then again I'm underwhelmed by Twitter in general. So much going through the firehose with so little context and relative value.
- Adam Lasnik