Fred Thompson? What's Law & Order got to do with anything?

(Wilson?)

--ab



On Mon, Apr 12, 2010 at 12:10 PM, Jesse Stay <jesses...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I think it's great that Twitter is finally being more transparent about all
> this.  I could argue they need to be more transparent (where do they plan to
> go in the analytics and enterprise spaces?), but it's about time.  They've
> finally drawn the line in the sand - now we need to adapt.  Yes, it's
> frustrating, but then again, 90% of businesses fail - it's the risk all of
> us took.  We either compete, or quit, and move on.  I don't get all the
> complaints - this is nothing new.  I've had half my features replaced by
> Twitter over the last few years (quite literally - just read my blog - I'm
> the chief complainer).  By now I realize that's either part of life (note:
> it's the same on Facebook, too - there's no escaping it), or I change my
> focus to where Twitter is not my core and I instead use Twitter to
> strengthen my new core.  That's where Twitter (and Fred Thompson) have made
> it clear they want us to go.  Finally, some clarity.  I'm appreciative of
> it, regardless of how frustrating it can be.  Time for all of us to take
> this constructively and adapt.
> Just my $.02 FWIW...
> Jesse
>
> On Mon, Apr 12, 2010 at 9:54 AM, Isaiah Carew <isa...@me.com> wrote:
>>
>> Crystal clear.
>> 1.  You're decimating the client market on every platform but Windows.
>> 2.  You're killing any potential for innovation or investment.
>> 3.  You have no clear (public) plan for any innovation yourself.
>> What marketing genius...
>> Oh never mind.  It's not worth the breath.
>> Good luck with that.
>> Anyone want a chirp ticket?
>> isaiah
>> http://twitter.com/isaiah
>> On Apr 12, 2010, at 7:40 AM, Ryan Sarver wrote:
>>
>> One more from me. People have been asking for specific details around
>> Tweetie for Mac and I wanted to make sure we clearly message our plans
>> as we know it. To be clear, Tweetie for the iPhone and it's developer,
>> Loren Brichter, were the focus of our acquisition, but as part of the
>> deal we also got Tweetie for Mac.
>>
>> Loren had been hard at work on a new version of Tweetie for Mac that
>> he was going to release soon. Our plan is to still release the new
>> version and it will continue to be called Tweetie (not renamed to
>> Twitter). We will also discontinue the paid version.
>>
>> Hope that's clear. Please let me know if you have any questions.
>>
>> Best, Ryan
>>
>
>


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