Post by account_disabled on Mar 11, 2024 2:51:29 GMT -6
Twitter has just made available a new feature called Moments, so far used only by the social medium's internal editorial staff. Starting today, each user will have the opportunity to collect content on a specific theme and share it with the community. From your profile, by clicking on "create a moment" in the right column, you can define a title, add a cover image and select the contents you want to collect in this thematic timeline. To facilitate this process it is possible to use those tweets that have already been marked as favorites or that come from a certain account, from a specific search or from a link.
For everyone who wants to make a Moment – starting today you Canada Phone Number can! Creators everywhere can now tell stories with Tweets. pic.twitter.com/ZJtNBoTPWf — Twitter (@twitter) September 28, 2016 Once finished you can share the created story publicly. Viewing it from a mobile device it will be enjoyed as a slideshow of sequential tweets, certainly more attractive than a vertical list of messages. It seems to me to be an intelligent, but perhaps late, attempt to stimulate the most active users, primarily media companies , to create content quickly through a curation activity . Ultimately, this is what Storify has been allowing you to do for a long time.ince its birth, 11 years ago, YouTube has always been a service for sharing and watching videos. Comments and interactions (thumbs up and down) have always been ancillary and unimportant compared to the use of the video, the true "social object" on which the service is based.
But all this could change with the introduction of a feature eloquently called “Community”. This is an area of the channel through which the author can express himself, for the first time, also through the publication of texts, photos, animated gifs and obviously videos. Readers will be able to comment on them and mark them with a thumbs up or down. They will also be able to see the posts published in their feed, when they open YouTube, and choose whether to receive a notification. For the moment the function has been released only to the major "creators" i.e. those "youtubers" with the highest levels of viewer involvement (to see how it works visit Vlogbrothers ). In the future, however, it could be extended to all those who have a channel and contribute to the transformation of YouTube into a broad-spectrum publishing tool. For now, YouTube's goal is to expand the range of tools available to "creators" to prevent them from fleeing to Facebook.
For everyone who wants to make a Moment – starting today you Canada Phone Number can! Creators everywhere can now tell stories with Tweets. pic.twitter.com/ZJtNBoTPWf — Twitter (@twitter) September 28, 2016 Once finished you can share the created story publicly. Viewing it from a mobile device it will be enjoyed as a slideshow of sequential tweets, certainly more attractive than a vertical list of messages. It seems to me to be an intelligent, but perhaps late, attempt to stimulate the most active users, primarily media companies , to create content quickly through a curation activity . Ultimately, this is what Storify has been allowing you to do for a long time.ince its birth, 11 years ago, YouTube has always been a service for sharing and watching videos. Comments and interactions (thumbs up and down) have always been ancillary and unimportant compared to the use of the video, the true "social object" on which the service is based.
But all this could change with the introduction of a feature eloquently called “Community”. This is an area of the channel through which the author can express himself, for the first time, also through the publication of texts, photos, animated gifs and obviously videos. Readers will be able to comment on them and mark them with a thumbs up or down. They will also be able to see the posts published in their feed, when they open YouTube, and choose whether to receive a notification. For the moment the function has been released only to the major "creators" i.e. those "youtubers" with the highest levels of viewer involvement (to see how it works visit Vlogbrothers ). In the future, however, it could be extended to all those who have a channel and contribute to the transformation of YouTube into a broad-spectrum publishing tool. For now, YouTube's goal is to expand the range of tools available to "creators" to prevent them from fleeing to Facebook.