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How to use live twitting and tweets in events

Dan Thornton | October 14, 2008

Here’s an interesting guide to live twitting from events – guest posted by Julius Solaris, blogger and event planner extraordinaire.
On the 29th of November 2008, I’ll be involved in ecoCampLondon a BarCamp about the environment and sustainability. The aim of the camp is to produce a document with all the discussion of the sessions. For the previous edition we just gave out a template which the session promoter needed to fill in. Boring and time consuming.
We felt that this solution was a bit 1999, so we decided to look at new ways to collect discussions. And here it goes: LiveTwitting

How does it work?
- Every attendee needs to follow either @livetwitting or @livet

- There are very simple commands to learn

FUNCTION COMMAND
To start livetwitting d livetwitting ON Name or ID of Conference # Session Title

Example: d livetwitting ON BlogWorld 2008 # Keynote

Example: d livetwitting ON 25 # Keynote

To record your notes Just type away! Every status update will be recorded until you turn it off.
You can send direct messages (d livetwitting your notes) if you don’t want
to share your livetwitting with your followers.
To mark a segment with a Topic name (optional) d livetwitting TOPIC Name of Topic
To mark a speaker (optional) d livetwitting SPEAKER Speaker’s Name
To mark a Question & Answer segment (optional) d livetwitting QA
To pause recording (i.e. to say hi to someone else) d livetwitting PAUSE
To resume recording (after a pause command) d livetwitting RESUME
To end livetwitting d livetwitting OFF

- You can manage all the sessions talks on the LiveTwitting website.

BarCamps are a fork of Open Space Technology. The aim of these unconferences is to produce something in a team effort rather than just loosing all that precious interaction among attendees. When the method was elaborated it was the mainframe era and static websites were common. With Web 2.0 things change.
Twitter allows to capture conversations in a great unbiased manner and therefore should be used for most if not all conferences, tradeshows and events in general. The 140chars nature of the service pushes attendees to actually summarize what is going on and synthesize the content in a great way.
Making your event more compliant with new technologies is the way to go and you may be missing out on precious feedback and content if you fail to do so.

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[...] guest posted on 140Chars about live twitting [...]

How to manage twitter discussion during events | Event Manager Blog | October 14, 2008

[...] guest posted on 140Chars about live twitting [...]

Thanks for this post. Is there a way for tweets

Laura | October 14, 2008

Thanks for this post. Is there a way for tweets related to an event not to appear in your personal stream but to be aggregated in a shared event stream? I’m sometimes told off by my followers for clogging up their streams when I am tweeting a lot from an event.
Laura

Hi Laura thanks for your question, well if the event uses

Julius | October 14, 2008

Hi Laura thanks for your question,

well if the event uses the above, the chance to Direct Message saves the rest of your followers from too many notes.

Otherwise you can use the TwitterDeck application which allows you to group users and send twits only to selected pals i.e. the event!

Hope this helps

Julius

Sounds interesting Julius, I've seen some great reports of live-twittered

Jaz Cummins | October 15, 2008

Sounds interesting Julius, I’ve seen some great reports of live-twittered events recently.

Best of luck, looking forward to hearing how it goes.

Jaz

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