Venkatesh Rao@vgr·Aug 26, 20151/ Yusuf Mehdi of Microsoft wins award for most convoluted tweetstorm style ever: "n: <text> n/n_max"Quote TweetYusuf Mehdi@yusuf_i_mehdi·Aug 26, 201510. #Windows 10: Thank you @KimKardashian,@ladygaga,@therock, and all who helped to #UpgradeYourWorld. Do Great Things. 10/102110
Venkatesh Rao@vgr·Aug 26, 2015Replying to @vgr2/ There are styles: n/ <text>, <text> n/n_max, n/n_max <text>, n., n) ...not all are equally good.111
Venkatesh Rao@vgr·Aug 26, 2015Replying to @vgr3/ The n/ style clearly means tweetstorm. n. and n) look fussy and old-media (i.e. Word) hangover to me. Also ambiguity wrt non-storm lists411
MoJoe@MoJoe·Aug 27, 2015Replying to @vgr@vgr last point = the best argument: new media = new practices. Surely some enterprising Twitter product types are hard at work right now...1
Venkatesh Rao@vgrReplying to @MoJoe@MoJoe There are already quite a few attempts at tweetstorm products. @nickducoff was doing one. But it needs to be twitter core first12:13 AM · Aug 27, 2015
MoJoe@MoJoe·Aug 27, 2015Replying to @vgr@vgr @nickducoff was thinking Twitter core; perhaps not clear from my tweet. Ordered list = fundamental structure in any communication media