Image via Wikipedia Okay so last year I ran a few posts featuring reader questions I’d received through the contact form. It was great because I’d post the question and then the readers would comment to help answer them. Here are a few I think worked out well last year: Answer A Reader Question: Promoting Local Events on Twitter Answer A Reader Question: Multiple Twitter Users In Business Answer A Reader Question: My Twitter Account Was Phished! Answer A Reader Question: Top Tips Answer A Reader Question: Twitter Bullies Answer A Reader Question: Twitter Etiquette? Since it seemed to be a pretty popular type of post (from both sides), AND because Twitter and social media relies heavily on helping people, I’d like to bring that back as a regular feature, so send in your questions ! © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . Bringing Reader Questions Back To TwiTip

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Bringing Reader Questions Back To TwiTip
Posted by cgseo on January 7, 2010 at 8:50 am under Social Media.
Tags: events, pretty-popular, promoting-local, questions, reader-question, since-it-seemed, Social Media, twitter, twitter tips, twitter-account, twitter-bullies, wikipedia, worked-out-well, your-questions
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Real time and local mobile search are two of the major hot spots in search today. and now they’re coming together. We’ve heard more and more about OneRiot now that their rumored deal with Yahoo has been confirmed in testing —and OneRiot is bring real time (and social) to mobile, this time through a partnership with mobile search provider Taptu. Says MediaPost , People can search on their phone for real-time news. “You hear there’s a hurricane and want to read the latest buzz on your mobile phone,” says Tobias Peggs, general manager of OneRiot. “So, you do a search for ‘hurricane,’ but you don’t want to see the Wikipedia page. You need quick access to real-time news.” As a refresher, OneRiot aggregates comments and links from across many social sites, including Twitter, in real time. Taptu is using OneRiot’s API to provide the real time results. The next question with real time search is if and how it will be monetized. OneRiot’s general manager had more to say to MediPoast about that: Peggs says the next step to serve up ads in real-time results means developing additional services through the company’s API. The move to improve relevant ads will provide the ability to “quickly scale up” and support partners the size of Microsoft and Yahoo. And, of course, they’ve already begun working with Yahoo. However, currently it seems like advertising on real time search would be less profitable, since there are probably fewer real time commerce searches than information searches. Neither Microsoft’s nor Google’s deal with Twitter applied to mobile search. What do you think?

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Real Time Search Coming to Mobile
Posted by cgseo on November 10, 2009 at 12:03 pm under Social Media.
Tags: api, general-manager, less-profitable, microsoft, search, search-provider, social, time, tobias-peggs, wikipedia, yahoo
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