Taweet is the Future of Twitter

Taweet (beta) is a unique Twitter application that adds a whole new dimension to your Twitter experience: the future. The casual format of Taweet allows users to answer one simple question: “What are you doing in the future?” …and search the future to see what others are doing.

You create posts on Taweet in the same way you would add items to a calendar or timeline. You describe a future event and add the date and time it will occur. Your post is then added to your “Future Tweets” and is visible on your Taweet profile. You can view the profile of any Twitter user on Taweet.

When a future tweet is created it also posts to Twitter, with the date included, to let your followers know you have a new event coming up. At the date and time each of your posts is scheduled they also appear on your Twitter profile. The short-URL at the end of each Twitter post links to your topic page on Taweet where others can add comments. When a comment is made it posts to the Twitter account of the commenter, again linking back to the original topic.

You can use the “Post Now” feature to override scheduling. Tweets sent with the “Post Now” feature also include a short-URL to allow all of your Twitter posts to have threaded comments.

All future tweets are visible on the Taweet search page. Taweet’s future search is novel solution for promoting future events or searching the future to see what others are doing.

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Twitter Loophole has Tweeters Thinking Twice

Twitter users frequently share their thoughts in 140 characters or less, and sometimes do not think twice before posting. No worries though, the handy delete button is always available to remove remorseful tweets. Up until now most users were under the impression that deleted posts were swallowed by the black hole of cyberspace, never to be seen again. Tweleted has arrived to let us know this is simply not the case. Tweleted is an application that allows you to search by Twitter username to see what posts have been recently deleted.
 
The concept behind Tweleted is actually pretty simple due to what can be considered a loophole in the software design of Twitter. When you click delete that post is removed from your profile but still remains available via Twitter search. Tweleted simply compares Twitter search results for your username to the information displayed on your profile and returns only the tweets that do not match up.
 
Depending on your mood Tweleted offers Good and Evil modes. The default Good mode allows you to easily recover accidentally deleted posts. Evil mode promotes itself as an “instant drama generator” where you can search for embarrassing deleted tweets for fun and profit. John Mayer recently posted that “Wearing corduroy pants means having a nail file on you all the time,” however he apparently changed his mind shortly after.
 
The loophole has raised privacy concerns and sources say Twitter is working to correct this issue. For now setting your profile to private is a temporary fix if you have recently tweeted and deleted some dirty laundry.

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