Twitter is everywhere you look these days. You don't have to use it, but you can't hide from it. If you live under a rock, chances are somebody's sitting on top of that rock tweeting. It took a little bit for Twitter to catch on, but I think it's safe to say that it has officially taken the world by storm. Let's look at just a few ways it has impacted different forms of media and communication.
1. Instant Messaging
There's no denying that Twitter has changed the way many people instant message each other. Twitter has not exactly eliminated the more traditional IM medium, but it has had a large impact on the way people communicate with each other in real time.
The biggest way Twitter has impacted this form of communication is by taking real-time conversations public. While, this is clearly not the only purpose of Twitter, or even the only way to communicate with it, you can see conversations happening in real time with @replies in any given Twitter stream, including the public timeline. While the conversations don't always occur within the short timespan of an IM chat session, they often do, creating what many consider to be a bunch of "noise".
That limit makes tweeting an ideal way to get "quick hits" out to followers, which is a method that caters quite nicely to liveblogging. eBay showed a good example of this when its eBay Ink blog
an interesting piece looking at a company called
may even be playing a significant role in the success of movies at the box office. The reason for this of course is that word travels fast on Twitter.

With a simple retweet, users barely have to perform many keystrokes, and that word travels faster and faster. In my opinion, it's not really that much different than word spreading about movies on the Internet at large, it's just at a quicker pace, and via a channel (Twitter) where there is a huge audience. Twitter search no doubt plays a role in this too.
Love Twitter or hate it, there's no denying that the service has already had a huge impact on pop culture and the way people communicate and retrieve information (as well as convey it). The jury's still out on whether or not Twitter will be a successful company for the long haul, but it's a pretty safe bet that it will always be remembered for what it has done to the world.





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