As you can appreciate, I look at an awful lot of Twitter-related services – most of which are quickly dismissed because they’re simply not interesting, compelling, useful, valuable or interesting.
But once in a while, you run into a Twitter service that makes stands out. Case in point is twitdone, which takes the popular to-do list concept to Twitter.
Here’s how twitdone works:
After joining twitdone using your username and password, you can post to-dos by:
1. Sending a direct message to twitdone using Twitter.com or any Twitter publishing tool (Tweetdeck, Seesmic, Tweetie, etc.)
2. Log into twitdone, and then post updates of all the things you need to do.
Both methods create a to-do list within your twitdone account, which has the same look and feel as your Twitter account.
A nice feature within twitdone is the ability to manage your to-do list items. You can archive them, e-mail them or post them to Twitter.
All in all, twitdone is one of those applications that has the potential to really catch on with a lot of Twitter users. I can see it being used as a to-do tool as well as a way to bookmark interesting posts and URLs. Who knows, maybe twitdone will become the Twitter verison of Remember the Milk.
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twitdone Takes To-Do Lists to Twitter
But once in a while, you run into a Twitter service that makes stands out. Case in point is twitdone, which takes the popular to-do list concept to Twitter.
Here’s how twitdone works:
After joining twitdone using your username and password, you can post to-dos by:
1. Sending a direct message to twitdone using Twitter.com or any Twitter publishing tool (Tweetdeck, Seesmic, Tweetie, etc.)
2. Log into twitdone, and then post updates of all the things you need to do.
Both methods create a to-do list within your twitdone account, which has the same look and feel as your Twitter account.
A nice feature within twitdone is the ability to manage your to-do list items. You can archive them, e-mail them or post them to Twitter.
All in all, twitdone is one of those applications that has the potential to really catch on with a lot of Twitter users. I can see it being used as a to-do tool as well as a way to bookmark interesting posts and URLs. Who knows, maybe twitdone will become the Twitter verison of Remember the Milk.
For more on twitdone, check out its blog.