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A recap on the original three microblogging platforms.

Dan Thornton | July 13, 2009

Once upon a time, there were three prominent microblogging platforms, Twitter, Plurk and Jaiku. One became incredibly popular, one introduced a side-on view, and one was acquired and then released by the Google Fairy Godmother.

Others fell by the wayside, including Pownce, and Rejaw.

But how do they compare now, after the mainstream adoption of Twitter:

Obviously this doesn’t tell the complete story, as it tracks web visits only, but it’s safe to assume it’s proportionally correct. Twitter’s close to 25 million Unique Visitors, Plurk is holding steady between 250,000-300,000 for the past year, and Jaiku has dropped from 70,000 down to 30-40,000 for the last two months measured.

In fact, it’s not even winning the Open Source Microblogging Platform war – as Identi.ca has grown slightly while Jaiku declined.

Meanwhile, Google has listed the 46 official accounts it has on Twitter.

And in the meantime, we’ve seen the rise of Twitter clients such as Tweetdeck, internal microblogging such as Yammer,  the blend of micro and macro blogging in Tumblr and Posterous, and video and audio blogging with the likes of 12 seconds and Audioboo. Not forgetting the lifestreaming element of the likes of Friendfeed.

And although we talk about forums, blogs and Web 2.0 social networks as if they’ve reached the endpoint of their evolution, there’s still a lot more to come from them – I’d say the social elements of the web aren’t even 15% of what they’ll become in the next 10 years.

The question is how you as a person, you as a company, or you as a developer can find clarity through it all…

(There is also the question fo what Google were thinking re: Jaiku, and how it’s managing to miss out on the rise of Open Source as much as it did on the rise of microblogging – after all, the platform itself doesn’t appear to be the cause)

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Microblogging, Microblogging Round-Up
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12seconds, audioboo, friendfeed, google, jaiku, Plurk, posterous, pownce, rejaw, tumblr, Twitter
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  • jansegers
    Very Americo-centric worlview, once again...

    All over the world, in many of the world international languages, microblogs are available and triving...

    Pieter Jansegers
    microblogs.ning.com
  • Dan Thornton
    Hi - I'm happy to look and write about any microblogging platform - I tend to find myself focussing on Twitter as it has the most mainstream adoption, and due to the fact I'm an English-speaking European, and end up spending most of my time on it!

    Would you consider writing a guest post on some of the alternatives you refer to, to give us a less Americo-centric world view?

    (Incidentally, Jaiku was founded by two Finns in 2006, before being acquired by Google in 2007, meanwhile Plurk has now been translated into 20 languages. The American-centric measurement stats are simply due to the fact that Compete is a reasonable free tool for website comparisons for one of the largest markets in terms of audience and revenue - if there are alternatives for non-American website traffic stats, let me know!)
  • jansegers
    I confess I don't know about any Compete-like services outside the US...

    but calling Plurk one of the three original microblogs isn't right in my view, long before Plurk even existed, many language had their own blog and even in for the English speaking world there were already alternatives

    http://beemood.com for example or http://tumblr.com (though for this one, it depends on the definition you have of a microblogging service...)

    just a few language and a microblog mention:

    Spanish http://khaces.com
    Italian http://meemi.com
    German http://niimo.com
    Dutch http://numpa.nl
    Chinese http://fanfou.com
    Turkish http://nolyo.com
    Russian http://smspr.ru (renamed later on, but this url still works)
    Korean http://playtalk.net
    Romanian http://cirip.ro
    etc.
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