Since joining Twitter, I’ve done nearly 3,500 updates and, in the process, probably shared more than 1,000 links. I’ve also received hundreds of replies, including a lot of links for online services and Web sites.
What I can’t seem to find is an easy way to access all these updates and replies because there’s a lot of good stuff buried within that mountain of tweets.
In an ideal world, your Twitter account would have a search engine that would let you query all of your activity, or perhaps a tag cloud that would make it easy to find your content.
There may, in fact, be a third-party tool that lets you do this kind of thing so if you know of a personal Twitter search engine, let me know.
This kind of tool seems like a no-brainer given many people are generating a lot of really good content, even if it is 140 characters or less.
A Personal Twitter Search Engine
Since joining Twitter, I’ve done nearly 3,500 updates and, in the process, probably shared more than 1,000 links. I’ve also received hundreds of replies, including a lot of links for online services and Web sites.
What I can’t seem to find is an easy way to access all these updates and replies because there’s a lot of good stuff buried within that mountain of tweets.
In an ideal world, your Twitter account would have a search engine that would let you query all of your activity, or perhaps a tag cloud that would make it easy to find your content.
There may, in fact, be a third-party tool that lets you do this kind of thing so if you know of a personal Twitter search engine, let me know.
This kind of tool seems like a no-brainer given many people are generating a lot of really good content, even if it is 140 characters or less.