The Beginner’s Guide to Twitter
This post is a guide to Twitter for non-techies.
*** Make sure you follow me: @BobTurner
If you are new to Twitter, this will get you up and running fast. If you know someone who needs a little help or motivation getting started, send them a link to this post.
Just follow these eight steps.
- Set up your account. Go to Twitter to get started. Enter your name, email, and a password. Click Sign up.You will now be taken to a second screen where can select a username. This is the name by which you will be known on Twitter. What name should you use?
Your real name is best—if it’s available. If not, you can try using a middle initial or prefacing it with something like “the” or “real” (e.g., “TheFrankDavis” or “Real FrankDavis”).
Also, I recommend using initial caps and in-word caps. It will make your username more readable and memorable. For example: I use “MichaelHyatt” rather than simply “michaelhyatt.”
Now click on the Create my account button. That’s it. You are now official a member of the Twitter community. Congratulations!
Next, Twitter will assist you in getting started. It will explain what a tweet is and give you the opportunity to “follow” a few friends, popular people, or brands. You can opt out of these steps for now if you wish. Simply click the Skip this step link.
Twitter will also give you a chance to see if some of your friends are on Twitter by checking your online address book. However, your contacts will have to be in one of the supported services: GMail, Hotmail, Yahoo, or AOL. Also, you’ll only see users who have allowed their accounts to be found by email address.
This wasn’t that helpful to me when I initially started, since my contacts resided in Microsoft Outlook. However, I had a GMail account, so I just exported my contacts from Outlook and then imported them into Gmail. It worked flawlessly. However, if you get stuck, forget this step. You can add your friends later.
- Tweak your settings. Make sure you are on your Twitter home page. Click on theSettings link. You should be on the Account tab. Set the time zone.Do not check “Protect my updates” unless you only want those whom you approve to be able to get your updates. Personally, if you check this, it will seriously limit the fun. Make whatever other changes you want. Click the Save button.
Now click on the Profile tab. Upload your picture. This is important. Many Twitter users (including me) will not follow users without photos, because it is a tell-tale sign of a spammer. Remember that the maximum upload size of your photo is 700k, so you may have to re-size your image to meet this requirement.
Enter the rest of your information, including your location, website or blog (if any), and a brief bio. This, too, is important to keep you from getting flagged as a possible spammer. Your bio can either be serious or fun, but it must be brief—no more than 160 characters.
Note that you can also connect your Twitter account to Facebook on this page. This will post all your Tweets directly to Facebook. Personally, I don’t recommend this, but you may want to do it. You can always change the setting later.
When you are finished, click the Save button.
- Setup your phone. Twitter is much more fun if you connect it to your cell phone. By doing so, you can receive updates from those you are following (or just some of them) as well as send your own updates. It’s all done through text messaging (e.g., SMS).However, be forewarned: While Twitter doesn’t charge anything for this service, your phone carrier might. It’s a good idea to check with them and make sure you are on an “unlimited text messaging plan.” You don’t want to be surprised with a big phone bill.
Again, under the Settings link, click on the Mobile tab. Enter your mobile phone number and click on the Start button. Now take your cell phone and text message the code Twitter gives you to 40404 (the number will be different if you are outside the U.S.). Be patient. Eventually, Twitter will confirm to you that your device is registered.
If you are using an iPhone, Twitter is built into the operating system (at least if you are using iOS 5 and up). You can set it up by opening the Preferences app, scrolling down the screen, and touching the Twitter section. This will give you the ability to post updates to Twitter from within many iPhone applications, including the Photo app.
Now, while still on your cell phone, set up a contact named “Twitter.” For the mobile phone number, use 40404. Now every time you want to send a Twitter update, you will send it to this contact name.
- Follow family and friends. If you haven’t done so already, add your family and friends by clicking in the “Search” field at the top of your home page. You can type in a username or first and last name. When you do, you will get a list of users who match your search criteria.
*** Make sure you follow me: @BobTurner
- You can also do a more advanced search (e.g., searching by location) by clicking on “Refine results” or by going directly to the Advanced Search page.
You can begin “following” them by simply clicking on the Follow button. If you want to also follow them on your cell phone, then you can turn the “Device Updates” to “on.” Personally, I only follow my family and a few close friends on my cell phone. Regardless, you will be able to see everyone you follow on your Twitter home page.
- Learn the basic commands. Think of Twitter as a room full of people, all sitting in a circle. It’s a conversation. When you update your status, you are speaking to the whole group. Everyone can hear what you have to say.
- Replies. If you want to direct your comments to one specific person in the circle, but loud enough that everyone else can hear, use the “Reply” function. You address the person by using their Twitter user name preceded by the “@” symbol. For example:
@bobturner I get my haircut at Cost Cutters in Portage.
Everyone who is following Spence and me will see the message, but this post is specifically directing it to me, via my twitter account. (Those who are not following both of us will not see the message.)
You can also use the Reply function to refer to someone by name. For example:
I’m headed to dinner at Tin Angel with @gailhyatt and @meghmiller. I am looking forward to trying the new menu.The thing about replies is that they are “clickable links.” If someone who is following me, clicks on one of the names, they will automatically go to that person’s Twitter page. This will give them the opportunity to follow that person, too.
- Direct Messages. Continuing with the metaphor of a conversation with a room full of people, you can also use the “direct message” function. This is like whispering in one person’s ear. They can hear you, but no one else can. You are directing the message to them and only them. For example:
d lnobles Can you bring my Business Review notebook down to the cafeteria conference room?
Or:
d gailhyatt It looks like I will not be able to leave the office for another 30 minutes. Bummer.Twitter direct messages have largely replaced simple text messaging for me and many people I know.
- Hash tags. You are probably familiar with tagging photos with a short piece of text. Twitter has this capability, too.The # symbol, called a hashtag, is used to mark keywords or topics in a Tweet. It was created organically by Twitter users as a way to categorize messages. If you click on a hash tag, it will show you all the other tweets associated with a hashtag.
I have attended many conferences where an official hashtag was announced. This enables everyone at the conference to track what everyone is saying about the conference.
For example, someone might say:
Man, I loved @JohnPiper’s latest sermon. He never ceases to speak to me. #dgnc#dgnc was the hashtag for the Desiring God National Conference.
- Other Commands. You can add people you want to follow from your cell phone. Just type in “follow [username].” For example:
Follow kendavislive
You can check your stats–the number of people you are following plus the number of people following you–from your cell phone by typing “stats” without any additional text.
To stop all Twitter updates to your phone, send:
offTo turn them back on send:
onYou can find answers to almost every other Twitter question in the Twitter Help Center.
- Replies. If you want to direct your comments to one specific person in the circle, but loud enough that everyone else can hear, use the “Reply” function. You address the person by using their Twitter user name preceded by the “@” symbol. For example:
- Start twittering. So now you are all setup. It’s time to start Twittering. You can do this from your Twitter home page or from your cell phone.The main thing you need to know is that the message can no longer than 140 characters long. If you use the Web page, the entry field will automatically count your characters. After a while, you’ll instinctively know how long this is. I rarely go over the limit. But if you do, it’s no big deal. Your message will just be truncated.
How often should you Twitter? That’s the 30-character question.
The real issue is whether or not you are adding something of value. There’s an old Jerry Seinfeld comedy routine called “Air Travel.” In it, he talks about airline pilots who insist on telling us all about the route they are taking. (Like anyone cares.)
He says, as passengers, we don’t knock on the cockpit door and say, “Oh, by the way, I’m eating the peanuts now.” (Obviously this was pre-911.) So why do pilots feel the need to update us? All we care about is getting to the destination.
In like manner, no one probably wants to hear the blow-by-blow of your life. However, some color commentary is good. However, this is definitely art not science, so there are no hard, fast rules.
Regardless, you should consider every Twitter update as a branding impression. You are developing a reputation with your online friends, so make sure you are adding something to the conversation.
This is really no different than a face-to-face conversation. You want to say something that is interesting, helpful, or just plain entertaining. I don’t think you should over-think it, but I don’t think you should just text the first thing that pops in your mind.
- Be careful. You definitely need to be cautious. It’s probably not a good idea to say something like, “I’m headed to the west coast for a week. My poor, beautiful wife is going to be home all alone.” Bad idea. For obvious reasons.You need to think about the fact that crazy people and criminals have Twitter accounts, too. You especially need to be cautious about sharing too much private information that could compromise your safety or that of your loved ones.
I have also had some experience with stalkers, so you may only want to Twitter afteryou have gone somewhere, not before. Otherwise, you might find people showing up to watch you. (Don’t laugh. It has happened to me on several occasions.)
- Consider third-party apps. An entire eco-system has sprung up around Twitter. Here are some of my favorite applications:
- HootSuite. This is the application I use to manage Twitter on my desktop. It will even manage Facebook profiles and pages, LinkedIn, and several other social media services. It is great because it allows you to segment people by groups (or columns). I have groups for my family, close friends, colleagues, etc. It is available for both desktop systems and mobile devices.
- BufferApp. I use this application to post my tweets, so I don’t flood my followers with a string of posts. Instead, I put them in Buffer, and it spreads my tweets throughout the day. It gives you tremendous control. You can determine how often and at what times you tweet. It comes with extensions for the most popular browsers, so you can buffer a tweet directly from a web page. It also allows you to buffer Facebook status updates.
- SocialOomph. I use this application to bulk-schedule a whole series of tweets. For example, I have identified my 90 most popular blog posts. I have written a tweet promoting each one. Via SocialOomph, I schedule one tween per day at a specific time. I upload the text file to SocialOomph and forget about it. Everything is on auto-pilot. It will also post to Facebook.
It is easy to get overwhelmed with all the third-party Twitter apps. Don’t. Start with HootSuite and then grow from there as you have the time and interest.
Twitter is one of those apps that is best learned by using it. The most important thing you can do is get started. You really can’t make that many mistakes. Just remember to have fun and enjoy the people you meet online.
*** Did I mention – Make sure you follow me: @BobTurner
—
- This blog post was adapted from Michael Hyatt’s blog
Coffee Recommendation: Margaritaville Latitude Attitude
As many of you know, I simply love Dunkin Donuts coffee. This is a staple item in my home and my office. However, like any good thing, it is wise to “switch it up” once in a while to awaken your palette anew, otherwise you become numb to how wonderful something you enjoy truly is. If you love ribeye steak, eating ribeye steak every single night for a year would cause you to become numb to how great it is. Thus, I enjoy trying different brands of coffee to re-awaken my taste buds in regards to coffee as well. This also allows me much opportunity to try different types of blends out there too, which makes it more fun.
This week, I am trying a new brand called “Margaritaville Coffee”. I saw the label in the store and was intrigued. I love their slogan: “Escape to Paradise”. It seemed very fitting to the brand name. They also boast “100% Arabica” which is Dunkin Donut’s boast as well, therefore I assumed this would be a most enjoyable taste test. Margaritaville had a 4 different options for me to try, 5 if you count decaf, which I don’t. After reviewing them all, I went with “Latitude Attitude”, which is a medium roast. I’m not much for dark roasts, but if you are, they had a few to choose from. One thing I really like is that the back of their bag features all of their different roast options along with a description too.
So after brewing my first half a pot the other morning, I have to say that I am very impressed! It is a bold coffee, strong in flavor but not overwhelming. I tend to make my coffee strong (understatement?) and I found the need to add extra creamer to my cup. :) It really tastes wonderful. It might even remind you a bit of Dunkin, but with a new twist. I highly recommend trying it! If you try one of the other type (besides decaf), please let me know what you think. Enjoy!
Replace iTunes icon with Song's Album Art
Replace Your Boring iTunes Icon With Currently Playing Song’s Album Art [How-To]
Here’s a great tip for Mac users: it’s easy to replace the boring old iTunes icon in the dock with the album art for whatever track is playing. Here’s how.
To use this trick, you’re going to want to download DockArt, a free iTunes plugin that many-calories.net works in version 10.4 or above.
Once you’ve downloaded Dock Art, you’re going to want to follow the following instructions from OS X Daily:
1. Unzip the DockArt2.zip file to a folder.
2. From the OS X Desktop, hit Command+Shift+G to bring up the “Go To Folder” window and enter the following directory path:
~/Library/iTunes/iTunes Plug-Ins/
3. Drag creditscoresnow.net the ‘DockArt.bundle’ file into that folder
4. Relaunch iTunes and start playing a song
Once you do, you should see the album art replacing the iTunes icon for any playing song. If there’s no cover art, the regular iTunes icon will pop up instead.
Want to play with DockArt’s options? No problem. In iTunes, just go to View > Visualizer > Dock waterfilternow.net Art, make sure it is selected, then go there again and select Options. From there, you can change the way the cover art is displayed, tick off a badge notice for unplayed podcasts and more.
Fantastic stuff. Between this tip and the previous tip about displaying track information right over the iTunesicon, who needs any other app?
—
- from cultofmac
The Origin of Thanksgiving
As we gather with our families to eat turkey, watch football and… oh yes, celebrate Thanksgiving, I wonder how many of us know how this holiday got started. I remember in school teachers telling us that is started with pilgrims and indians. While there was a 3 day feast at Plymouth Rock (this was to give thanks to God for a safe journey to this new land), Thanksgiving was officially set as a National yearly holiday by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863.
Lincoln set this day aside for all Americans to devote time to gather together & give thanks to Almighty God for His abundant blessings. This is the true roots of our annual Thanksgiving holiday tradition. So as you gather together, remember this day was set aside by a godly President long ago in order for Americans to give thanksgiving to our Lord for all of His blessings upon us. Give thanks!
Here is President Lincoln’s proclamation from 1863:
—
By the President of the United States of America.
A Proclamation.
The year that is drawing towards its close, has been filled with the blessings of fruitful fields and healthful skies. To these bounties, which are so constantly enjoyed that we are prone to forget the source from which they come, others have been added, which are of so extraordinary a nature, that they cannot fail to penetrate and soften even the heart which is habitually insensible to the ever watchful providence of Almighty God. In the midst of a civil war of unequaled magnitude and severity, which has sometimes seemed to foreign States to invite and to provoke their aggression, peace has been preserved with all nations, order has been maintained, the laws have been respected and obeyed, and harmony has prevailed everywhere except in the theatre of military conflict; while that theatre has been greatly contracted by the advancing armies and navies of the Union. Needful diversions of wealth and of strength from the fields of peaceful industry to the national defence, have not arrested the plough, the shuttle or the ship; the axe has enlarged the borders of our settlements, and the mines, as well of iron and coal as of the precious metals, have yielded even more abundantly than heretofore. Population has steadily increased, notwithstanding the waste that has been made in the camp, the siege and the battle-field; and the country, rejoicing in the consiousness of augmented strength and vigor, is permitted to expect continuance of years with large increase of freedom. No human counsel hath devised nor hath any mortal hand worked out these great things. They are the gracious gifts of the Most High God, who, while dealing with us in anger for our sins, hath nevertheless remembered mercy. It has seemed to me fit and proper that they should be solemnly, reverently and gratefully acknowledged as with one heart and one voice by the whole American People. I do therefore invite my fellow citizens in every part of the United States, and also those who are at sea and those who are sojourning in foreign lands, to set apart and observe the last Thursday of November next, as a day of Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth in the Heavens. And I recommend to them that while offering up the ascriptions justly due to Him for such singular deliverances and blessings, they do also, with humble penitence for our national perverseness and disobedience, commend to His tender care all those who have become widows, orphans, mourners or sufferers in the lamentable civil strife in which we are unavoidably engaged, and fervently implore the interposition of the Almighty Hand to heal the wounds of the nation and to restore it as soon as may be consistent with the Divine purposes to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquillity and Union.
In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Seal of the United States to be affixed.
Done at the City of Washington, this Third day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, and of the Independence of the Unites States the Eighty-eighth.
By the President: Abraham Lincoln
How to Call for a Gospel Response Like a Calvinist
“Think like a Calvinist. Preach like an Arminian.”
That is how one preaching professor taught his students to call people to faith in a sermon. He couldn’t reconcile a theological system that embraces God’s sovereignty in salvation with a plea for sinful people to change. Ultimately, this prof thought Calvinism makes sense biblically and logically, but not practically.
Perhaps you have struggled with this, too. I know I have.
There was a season of my ministry where I didn’t call people to believe the gospel. I preached the gospel, of course, but only with the hope that the Spirit would use his word to regenerate spiritually dead teenagers against their will. I merely implied that they must believe the gospel.
But I have turned from this mindset. This is not because my pendulum has swung to a more balanced position between Calvinism and Arminianism—I don’t believe there is such a thing. It’s because I’ve grown to understand what Calvinism is and, perhaps more importantly, what it isn’t.
It is Calvinistic to call people to respond with faith in the gospel.
Eschewing theological labels for a moment, it is biblical and Christian to call people to believe in the gospel. This is, after all, how Jesus began his ministry: “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel” (Mark 1:14-15). You don’t have to know Greek to recognize the imperatives.
But we Calvinists love to quote Ephesians 2:8. “Faith pacsuncouponsnow.net is a gift from God!” we exclaim. “It doesn’t originate in the person!”
The question is: When non-Christians do repent and believe the gospel, do they express faith in Christ? Or does God grant the gift of faith in Christ to men? Yes! Why? Scripture teaches that faith in Christ includes both an objective and a subjective aspect. This is not a contradiction. Rather, the two must be held in tension.
Objectively speaking, faith is a gift from God (Eph. 2:8, although the “gift” is the whole work of salvation, not just the faith). Subjectively speaking, the person exercises faith in the gospel (Eph. 1:13). This is why Paul thanks God (the objective side) for the Ephesians’ faith in the Lord (the subjective side; Eph. 1:15-16).
Since faith is both objective and subjective, we are right, as Calvinists, to call unbelievers to put their faith in Jesus.
Hyper-Calvinists inappropriately overemphasize the objective aspect of faith. Therefore, they have a hard time calling people to put their trust in Jesus. Arminians, on the other hand, inappropriately overemphasize the subjective aspect of faith, as ultimately the responsibility of the individual.
Calvinism, and more importantly the Bible, appropriately emphasizes both, which is why we can (must!) call unbelievers to put their faith in Christ, and mean it.
Calvinists believe there is power in the call to respond.
Someone might respond, “Okay, faith is objective and subjective. But if the person hasn’t been regenerated, the call to faith falls on spiritually deaf ears, walkingpneumonianow.net and therefore will necessarily be ineffective.”
But this response fails to recognize that the power for a person to change lies not in their current spiritual condition. The power lies within the preached Word through the work of the Holy Spirit. “The gospel is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes” (Rom. 1:16).
The Word is what works the change: Jesus told the paralytic to get up. God told the light to show up. Jesus told Lazarus to come out.
Charles Spurgeon once said:
The effectual call of grace is precisely similar [to that of Lazarus]; the sinner is dead in sin; he is not only in sin but dead in sin, without any power whatever to give to himself the life of grace. . . . Sovereign grace cries, either by the minister, or else directly without any agency, by the Spirit of God, “come forth!” and that man lives. Does he contribute anything to his new life? Not he; his life is given solely by God.
By God’s grace, his Word, proclaimed by sinful people, contains the power to change hearts.
Calvinists pray for unbelievers to respond to the call.
Is there a point in praying for people to respond to the gospel if the number of those who will respond is fixed in God’s plan from eternity?
Paul seems to think so: “Brothers, my heart’s desire and prayer to God for them is that they may be saved” (Rom. 10:1). Who is Paul praying pfchangcoupons.net for? Israel, who seeks to establish a righteousness of their own through the works of the law (Rom. 9:31; 10:3) rather than by faith in Christ.
Does it shock you that Paul prays for Israel’s salvation in his most extensive section on God’s sovereignty in election? Perhaps a prayer like this sounds Arminian to you. Perhaps it sounds like the future is open for the souls we preach to, and that they have not been predestined one way or the other.
But to pray for someone to be saved is thoroughly Calvinistic. Why? Every prayer for God to save someone is at least an implicit confession that they can’t respond to the gospel in their own power, whether or not we explicitly acknowledge this to be the case. When you pray for God to save someone, you say, “God, you must do the work to save this person, because otherwise, they won’t turn to you.”
How to think like a Calvinist and preach like one.
Where do we go from here? This discussion boils down to three ways Calvinists ought to proclaim the gospel:
- Explicitly call the unregenerate to believe in the gospel.
- Trust that the Holy Spirit will do the work to make that call effective in the elect.
- Pray that God would save people through the inherent power of the gospel.
More than just being practical, Calvinism contains the power for calling sinners to respond to the gospel in faith.
—
- from The Gospel Coalition
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