Plurk This, Twitter! (Updated)

It’s been a year or longer since I stated I was dumping Twitter for Plurk (I joined in 2008), but to be honest, I was back on Twitter within the day. My network was bigger on Twitter and I had more folks reading there than Plurk. However, since Kevin Honeycutt’s preso at TEC-SIG, I’ve taken the time to login to Plurk more often and see what might happen. Although every blog entry I write goes through Ping.fm and gets shared on Plurk, Twitter, and Buzz simultaneously, I’ve found myself coming back to Plurk.

Update: Read this blog entry over at PowerLibrarian
No doubt, a lot of edu-plurkers must see me as a plurker stalker as I seek to “crash” their networks. Be nice and let me in, by the hair of my chinny-chin-chin! ;->

Maybe it’s this Pew survey that has me taking a long look at Plurk again, maybe not:

A survey by Pew and Elon found that 85 percent of 895 “technology stakeholders” and pundits agreed that the Internet has mostly been a positive force in peoples’ social lives. Social benefits of Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Google Apps will outweigh the negatives over the next decade because e-mail, social networks, and other Web services offer low friction ways to forge and rediscover social ties that make a difference in people’s lives.

Here’s why I’m having fun with Plurk now:

  1. On Plurk, I get the benefit of an aggregated conversation. Instead of looking at a timeline of tweets that I have to make sense of, it’s easier to “peek” in and see what people are chatting about. That means, if I see something someone is writing about, its 100% for sure that follow up comments will be directly relevant.
  2. The desktop interfaces for Plurk have improved…sort of. When working on Plurk, I couldn’t imagine trying to use it much with it’s sideways scrolling monstrosity of a site. Fortunately, their mobile page is much easier to work with and APIs–ways that other software can interface with Plurk–have made it easier to work with. Now, you can find a variety of clients that will interface with Plurk well, such as:
    • Bitter for Windows computers.
    • Plurker (in beta) – a very nice Plurk client (shown to the right, above) that needs Adobe Air to work. Best of the desktop plurk tools so far but still missing…something.
    • Fluid App is still around and works fine on Mac. This is now my primary interface. During setup, you can have it point to the Mobile Plurk interface (plurk.com/m) if you prefer that (I do), or just do the regular Plurk.com address. Compare FluidApp to Prism on Windows. Both setup up a web site on your browser as a clickable button and are focused on that. (image here)
  3. Mobile Phone Apps are better. PlurQ and/or Pluroid work great for Android phones. iPhone users (e.g. Plurkapp for Iphone, iPlurk) will have to tell me what works for them!

And, though it’s not much of a feature, Plurk has this underdog feel to it. It simply lacks all the neat stuff available for Twitter but maybe, that’s not what it’s about.

PLURK DESIGNS
That said, you can also enhance the design of your Plurk look…unfortunately, many of these images for the Plurk designs are hosted on Photobucket. To get around the error messages (bandwidth exceeded), you can do what I did earlier today…upload the images for your favorite Plurk design to somewhere else (e.g. PicasaWeb) and then relink the images.

edit your CSS, and look for any photobucket images. Download those and then put them online at a web host of your choice, relink


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6 comments

  1. Glad you have come back to Plurk. My closest professional connections have been made there! But….did you have to pick my Mall cops quote? I have so many more meaningful things to say!

  2. Glad you have come back to Plurk. My closest professional connections have been made there! But….did you have to pick my Mall cops quote? I have so many more meaningful things to say!

  3. I am a Plurk-dabbler too, with only limited experience in Plurk world. Two things worth mentioning are that Plurk gives users "Karma points" based on participation. The top karma you can have is 100. I hazard to say. "Karma 100 plurkers" are in the best place to evaluate the network and compare it to Twitter. While I am NOT in that group and likely won't ever be (I'm sticking to Twitter for now too) I have observed that avid educator plurkers are among the most passionate PLN advocates I know. They would say it's all about the personally supportive community… I would bet that was part of Kevin's message at TEC-SIG.

  4. I am a Plurk-dabbler too, with only limited experience in Plurk world. Two things worth mentioning are that Plurk gives users “Karma points” based on participation. The top karma you can have is 100. I hazard to say. “Karma 100 plurkers” are in the best place to evaluate the network and compare it to Twitter. While I am NOT in that group and likely won't ever be (I'm sticking to Twitter for now too) I have observed that avid educator plurkers are among the most passionate PLN advocates I know. They would say it's all about the personally supportive community… I would bet that was part of Kevin's message at TEC-SIG.

  5. Glad you are giving Plurk another look! I was a dabbler in Twitter when I first found Plurk. Plurkers offered what I was missing on Twitter, a dedicated group of teachers that introduced me around to other teachers with whom I could have real conversations without having to jump around and click in reply to. I do feed my Plurks to Twitter and keep up with non-Plurkers on Twitter, but Plurk helps me keep it real!

  6. Glad you are giving Plurk another look! I was a dabbler in Twitter when I first found Plurk. Plurkers offered what I was missing on Twitter, a dedicated group of teachers that introduced me around to other teachers with whom I could have real conversations without having to jump around and click in reply to. I do feed my Plurks to Twitter and keep up with non-Plurkers on Twitter, but Plurk helps me keep it real!

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