A brief tutorial on Twitter hashtags and Twemes
November 24th, 2008 |
Hashtags are a popular, largely undocumented, and not well understood feature of Twitter. By using a hashtag, people can mark a series of tweets (updates) related to a single discussion or event. You’ll often see updates that include text preceded by the “#” character, like: #sxsw, in this case indicating tweets related to the South By Southwest conference. They’re called hashtags, because the # sign is often referred to as a “hash mark.”
A hashtag can be any character or characters you choose, but should be short (you have fewer than 140 characters in a tweet), memorable, and not already in widespread use.
Twemes is a really cool site for watching all of the latest hashtags to see what people are talking about (they even have a “Tweme Cloud” of popular hashtags), or just a single hashtag of interest.
Tonight for example, I noticed a lot of people using #GNO. I can see all tweets using this hashtag by going to http://www.twemes.com/gno (Note that you do not include the “#” character here.)
You can use Twemes to display in a blog sidebar or elsewhere all of the Twitter updates with any given hashtag. Like any ummanaged feed, there are risks with this. If I use hastags and Twemes to display tweets with the tag #Socialized, both “I love #Socialized” and “#Socialized sucks” would be displayed in my sidebar.
To get the code for this, I went to http://www.twemes.com/socialized If you do this, you will see several options. To get the code for a blog sidebar, click on “Widget.” You will see both an RSS feed for this hashtag, and below, the embed code for displaying all Twitter references to #Socialized in the blog’s sidebar. Just copy and paste the code. To get the code for any hashtag, just change the text after the final / in the URL above. You can see the results at the bottom of my sidebar.
You don’t have to use Twemes, but I like it. You can also use #hashtags.org. Just follow @hashtags on Twitter and #hashtags.org will index and display all your hashtags. (They autofollow so it’s quick.) Thanks to Rebecca Leaman for the pointer to #hashtags.org. #hashtags.org didn’t find my “socialized” tweet, but it may need some time to index my latest tweets, so I am going to try it again tomorrow.
Hashtags, Twemes and #hashtags.org are very useful for tracking Twitter conversations. Some Twitter clients and add-ons can also search for hashtags. I tried this tonight with Hahlo, my favorite Twitter iPhone client. Give it a try and let me know how it goes.
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Very Nice work….Well Put together resource!
Comment by BHGDigital — November 24, 2008 @ 9:28 pm
This is a cool site you have here, keep up the good work!
Comment by Matt Gio — November 25, 2008 @ 10:30 am
Thanks for the tutorial! I am still not sure if I completely get how this whole hashtags thing works, but bit by bit I’m learning.
Comment by Feedback Secrets — November 25, 2008 @ 10:44 am
Nice blog, I just found it. Coincidentally I wrote on my company’s blog yesterday about hashtags, and whether certain words can be “hijacked” if popular?
Please take a read if you have time, thanks.
http://blogs.gcigroup.com/fineprint/2008/11/25/micropr-connects-media-and-communications-professionals-via-twitter/
John.
Comment by John Carson — November 26, 2008 @ 2:49 pm
[...] to see how much more seamless and enjoyable the experience is. On Presently.com, you don’t need hashtags (though you can still use them) so participants, particularly those who are less technical, won’t [...]
Pingback by socialized » Presently.com: Twitter Meets LinkedIn — March 24, 2009 @ 3:51 pm