Posted on 03 April 2008
At first glance it might seem counter intuitive that microblogging could allow you to get to know someone more intimately than a regular blog. Closeness and familiarity in 140 characters or less? You might ask yourself: What could I possibly say in a series of text messages that would be meaningful enough for acquaintances to bother to keep reading? People everywhere are discovering that the answer is actually “a lot”.

A fundamental fact about microblogging platforms like Twitter is that the mobile devices we use and the speed we can post changes not only how we blog, but what we blog. Stuff that I’d never blog about makes it to Twitter, and I’m sure that’s true for most Twitter users. Even capping out at 140 characters per post, a stream of small posts about where you are, where you’re going, what you’re doing, eating, enjoying, reading, watching, feeling in near real time is actually far more personal and meaningful than reading a more lengthy article written by someone on the realities of, say, “microblogging.” :)
The recent rise and success of microblogging platforms like Twitter has shown us that people crave the personal, even in short snippets. Places you go, meals you enjoy, small comments and opinions on things you like as you’re experiencing them. These snippets of personal data matter in the blogging world. That they matter, coupled with the fact that microblogging allows us the speed and convenience to share this data with others conveniently, means that microblogging will only increase in popularity.
(Here’s my Twitter link for those curious folks interested in following me.)