Fiona has just finished making an awesome new facebook page for spellr.us!
Help us and become a fan - we only need 983 people more before we can get our own custom url
Fiona has just finished making an awesome new facebook page for spellr.us!
Help us and become a fan - we only need 983 people more before we can get our own custom url
In 140 characters: Capitalising on Twitter’s unique structure opens a new frontier for contextual bots to send intelligent, targeted responses.
From @cnnbrk to @common_squirrel, Twitter is crammed with bots built to deliver content in 140 characters or less. On the whole, this content mirrors traditional RSS feeds (in fact most bots are just RSS feeds fed into Twitter). However, there could be a new generation of bots on the horizon that capitalise on Twitter’s unique design.
Collectively users and bots have made nearly 1.8 billion Tweets. While this number is BIG, it is small in comparison with the number of unique web pages that exist; >1 trillion as of July 2008. Yet, there’s two very unique things about Twitter’s content that makes it much valuable than any other public database of this size.
A Tweet gets to the point
Twitter built the limitation of 140 characters into its Tweets, so that they could easily be sent in an SMS along with the username of the person who sent them. A large part of the success of Twitter is that this forces people to say what they want succinctly without the waffle that you get in web pages, blogs and forum posts. This means that each Tweet is about a specific nugget of information (or meme).
A Tweet is has meta-data
A Tweet has an author, a time and possibly hastags and @reply information that is all incredibly easy to access computationally. While web pages & blog posts also often have this information, it is much harder to access. There’s no simple way to computationally respond to the author of most information on the web.
A new frontier
Together these features lead to some very interesting possibilities for Twitter bots. The succinctness of Twitter makes it relatively easy to determine the information contained in a Tweet - more so if it’s a single question. “Where can I find… ?” “What’s the best…. ?” “How much does … cost?” are all questions regularly appearing in the Twitter stream. Building a Twitter bot that extracts these Tweets & parses them for meaning within a specific niche is reasonably easy. Any Tweet we’re not confident we can parse correctly, we just ignore. From the meta-data attached to a Tweet a bot can trivially respond to the author and reference the Tweet is it replying too. The original author will pick up this response in their @replies and see the link to the Tweet the response is to.
Here at spellr.us we’ve create a bot that demonstrate this concept. Our @_spell bot finds any Tweets with (sp?) in them and returns a spell check on the preceding word. The response we’ve received to this bot has been overwhelmingly positive. Approximately 1/5 of the people we respond to with @_spell follows us back and often send messages of support. We include links to http://spellr.us in both the replies we send (as part of the name of the application sending the Tweet) and in the account bio. Not only have we created a bot that many people find useful, but it also acts as a marketing vehicle for our products.
The possibilities for bots capitalising on this concept is endless. Bots that provide directions, restaurant or product recommendations, or weather information are just a few ideas. As Twitter grows the number of people a simple bot will reach continues to increase.
Where’s the line?
A caveat here is that we must be careful about sending spam. Unsolicited bulk messages are unwelcome in all messaging mediums. While Twitter has guidelines regarding how bots can follow users and send direct message, @replies are not regulated. We need to make sure that we don’t create bots that spam @replies to every user that mentions a product name or topic. By obeying two rules we can make sure that our bots remain good citizens;
1) Only reply to people to solicit responses - i.e. their Tweet contains a question.
2) Only provide responses that you can virtually guarantee will be useful.
Do you like this idea? Have you created a contextual Twitter bot? Let us know in the comments.
A message to all existing spellr.us Beta Testers and users that registered before 12pm 26 February 2009.
We will be sending you out an email early next week with an exclusive special offer regarding your account.
Keep an eye on your inbox.
Regards,
Kevin
Hi
We are live with spellr.us version 2.0.
Main changes in this version include enhanced content filters, UI changes and lots of bug fixes.
This is our first production version and all pricing plans are now live.
We look forward to receiving your feedback.
You can look at the minutes leading up to launch as they were streamed live on ustream here:
http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/1188557
Regards,
Kevin & The spellr.us Team.
Hi
Due to roll out of spellr.us version 2.0 spellr.us may be down between midday and 1pm AEST 26 February 2009.
We apologise for any inconvenience.
Regards,
Kevin & the Team
Hi
The spellr.us team are excited to launch a stable production version of the spellr.us system - spellr.us v2.0 - this launches 26 February Australian time (sometime in the morning).
As a fun exercise in the wisdom of the crowds we want to ask the spellr.us fans how long you will think it will take for our first commercial customer to sign-up with spellr.us - 1 hour from launch? 5 days? 20 minutes?
Let us know your predictions in this blog - the person that is the closest will win a $US100 Amazon.com voucher.
BONUS: If you are the closest predictor time wise AND get the plan choice to match with the first customer we will up the Gift Voucher to $150!
Kevin & the spellr.us team
Hi
Tomorrow sometime during the morning Australian time we will be releasing spellr.us version 2.0.
This version includes lots of bug fixes, slight UI changes, content filter enhancements and the billing module.
So today is the last day that ALL plans will be 100% free.
Please send all feedback regarding the pricing plans to admin at spellr.us .
Based on feedback we have already upgraded all plans to include content filters.
Some other feedback that has come through is to have an annual pricing option. We will consider this once we get a feel for which are the most popular pricing models.
Please keep the feedback coming and thanks for the support.
Kevin & the spellr.us team
We are very proud and excited to announce that the spellr.us service has officially launched.
We have a shiny new sparkling website and will be upgrading the application soon too.
Pricing remains FREE until 25 February 2009 - all existing beta testers will also be giving an extra discount - keep an eye on your inboxes.
Thanks to the team (Dain, Fiona, Charl. Jimmy) and a very special thanks to our uber talented zen developer James .
We look forward to receiving your feedback on the pricing plans.
We are also very excited to announce that we have been developing a link checking module which we will be releasing over the next few months - it will be available as an option.
Thanks for all the continued support and encouragement.
Kevin
Unfortunately we had a delay with some issues relating to billing aspects of our system (as an Australian company charging in US$ across the 3 major credit cards was a lot trickier than we anticipated from a merchant facility point of view).
All has been resolved and launch of new website, new version of system plus release of pricing plans should not be too far away.
Thanks for your patience.
Kevin
Hi All
We know that it has been sometime since you heard from us.
A brand new website and announcement of pricing plans will happen within the next 2 weeks.
Thanks for all the ongoing support and feedback.
Team spellr.us