|
|
|
|
|
by geoka9
5451 days ago
|
|
OK, this is interesting. Considering that a tweet is only 100-something characters, your use is essentially equivalent to following an RSS-like feed for a news site. The only difference is that the newsmaker can be anybody and you don't get to read a full version of the news article. Right? |
|
If you follow a feed that basically just outputs an RSS-esque feed of titles and links, then yes, it's just an interface for RSS.
You can also follow people and/or organisations that editorialise in their tweets. For example, if you want tech news from BBC, you could get a basic RSS feed, or you could look to someone like Rory Cellan-Jones and could follow his work account (@BBCRoryCJ) which is basically just BBC stuff, but not the same info you would get from an RSS feed with some extras added in, or his personal account (@ruskin147) where you get more personal thoughts/opinions etc.
And another option, getting news from your friends - so, in theory, that can provide you with interesting content from random different sources that fit your interests, which an RSS feed won't do. So it's kinda like what a sub-reddit is to the reddit frontpage, except purely personalised on who you want to follow.