Kieth,
Thanks for the feedback!
> including any hashtags or mentions that may be relevant for the RDF
> side of things.  Similar to what you did for #BigData.

Definitely worth investigating!  I almost did #RDF but I didn't see it in
the auto-completion list that popped up.  I'm not sure what determines the
list.
I guess doing a search with #RDF and others will tell me what is worth
using.

> Twitter shortens URLs itself and does not count the full len

I read about that, but in practice it didn't happen.  I used bitly because
I could not get the twitter post box to generate a t.co link and I wanted
all the characters I could get.

Wow what flurry of activity it caused!  So many retweets and new
followers!  Thanks for your retweet!

david.

On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 2:26 PM, Keith Turner <ke...@deenlo.com> wrote:

> On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 11:56 AM, David Lotts <dlo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Below is the announcement that I plan to send from our twitter account.
> > Improvements?
> >
> > Does anyone know how to embed a page summary like this post?
> >     https://twitter.com/TheASF/status/846668361253703680
> >
> > This is within three characters of the maximum.
> > ===
> > Apache Rya 3.2.11 incubating just released!
> > Rya is a #BigData RDF triple store using @ApacheAccumulo, @ApacheFluo
> > http://bit.ly/2izgy4I
> > ===
> > david.
>
> I know the tweet is out the door.  But for future I would recommend
> including any hashtags or mentions that may be relevant for the RDF
> side of things.  Similar to what you did for #BigData.  Not sure what
> that would be, but it would be worth investigating.
>
> Twitter shortens URLs itself and does not count the full len of your
> URL against the 140 char limit.  For example twitter created
> https://t.co/OP5xTuPT3r for your http://bit.ly/2izgy4I link.  Is there
> an advantage to using bit.ly link?
>

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