inicio mail me! sindicaci;ón

New Enterprise Communications Tools ? … Twitter Conjoined With Instant Calling (TM) = Phweet

by Jon Husband

Thanks largely to Rob Patterson’s previous posts on the issues and opportunities, regular readers of the FASTForward blog will know by now that Twitter (and other similar services like Pownce, Jaiku, Friendfeed, Identi.ca and Kwippy) have strong potential for practical use by project teams and connected networks of knowledge workers.

These services can be used to keep people aware of fast-moving issues, events and changes, and bring the strengths of IM and online presence together in useful ways.

Here comes another dimension to group instant messaging … one which promises to further close the gap regarding utility and the ability to reach into a network and connect with someone to whom you want to discuss whatever it may be that interests you or what you may need to know or find out.

A friend who is well-known to many in the Web 2.0 arena, Stuart Henshall, and his colleague David Beckemeyer (TelEvolution / PhoneGnome, Earthlink), have just launched Phweet, a service whereby a user with one click can ask someone who has just twittered (or pownced, or jaiku’d, or fed a friend or kwipped) whether or not they will accept a VoIP call.  Once accepted, voila !  Connection is established and the voice conversation begins.

In terms of how it operates technically, this service effectively eliminates the need for dial-tones (arguably the last remaining communications bottleneck the telcoms "own") in order to talk to someone else via voice.  Powerful stuff !

Please note that this service is alpha, and applies only to twitter at the moment, though I believe there plans to enable it for the other similar service I have mentioned.

Of course group IM users can already connect with someone they "know" and ask about / initiate a VoIP call in any number of ways, but this service makes the functionality available during the course of using the group IM service, thereby enhancing existing online presence and creating what some are calling ambient intimacy.

Go ahead, sign up and try it out.  I have … it’s easy, fun and potentially very useful, especially for project teams or private networks of people who are connected together on some issue or other.

.

Tags: , ,

Powered by Qumana

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Print this article!
  • TwitThis
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • bodytext
  • Google
  • StumbleUpon
  • SphereIt


5 Comments »

Stuart HenshallAugust 6th, 2008 at 10:37 pm

Jon,
Great post thanks for picking us up and also your early testing sessions with me. Much appreciated. We see plenty of potential for Phweet and you are right we have eliminated a key point of friction. That how to get connected, what’s your number etc. Click the link and you can be just talking.

Pleased to know you think it should go across other services. We’d like to see it everywhere. Two things I’d like to clarify. No new account - you log in with your twitterID currently. There’s lots more opportunity with @ than “D”. Sending a direct signal sets up a private call. Sending an @ signal via twitter potentially invites your friends to join in.

Cheers
Stuart

Phweet Quotes - Thanks | stuart henshallAugust 7th, 2008 at 12:12 am

[...] Twitter Conjoined With Instant Calling (TM) = Phweet Phweet, a service whereby a user with one click can ask someone who has just twittered (or pownced, [...]

[...] Here is a service (Phweet, in public Alpha) that leverages the Twitter network to IM a friend/follower that you would like to speak with them and then completes the call via VoIP. A friend who is well-known to many in the Web 2.0 arena, Stuart Henshall, and his colleague David Beckemeyer (TelEvolution / PhoneGnome, Earthlink), have just launched Phweet, a service whereby a user with one click can ask someone who has just twittered (or pownced, or jaiku’d, or fed a friend or kwipped) whether or not they will accept a VoIP call.  Once accepted, voila !  Connection is established and the voice conversation begins. Via Fast Forward Blog [...]

[...] Simplified Disintermediation - Jim Courtney at Skype Journal Jon Husband at the FastForward Blog:Twitter Conjoined With Instant Calling (TM) = [...]

[...] Simplified Disintermediation - Jim Courtney at Skype Journal Jon Husband at the FastForward Blog:Twitter Conjoined With Instant Calling (TM) = [...]

» Subscribe to the RSS feed for these comments

Your comment

Want an image to appear near your comment? Go to gravatar.com

HTML-Tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>