Pleasure and Pain

Measuring the impact of new technology on human experience

Pleasure and Pain: photos by Whitney G. Hess

Gridjit

January 22nd, 2008 · 4 comments so far

Gridjit is an easy way to turn your Twitter-verse into a grid view”

But why on earth would you want to? So far as I can tell, this serves absolutely no purpose. Just another example of “just because you can do something doesn’t mean you should.”

Can anyone figure out how this is useful?

Gridjit


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4 responses so far ↓

  •     Ray Grieselhuber // Jan 23, 2008 at 2:32 am

    Hi Whitney -

    Congratulations - you’re the first negative commenter. :-)

    The main reason I created it is because the majority of Twitter clients out there (including the web client) feel chaotic to me because of the vertical, list layout. I’m one of those people who prefer things laid out in grids, with items grouped consistently (eg. all recent messages grouped by author) instead of the chronological, “river” view that others prefer. That’s it, really.

    The feedback I’ve received so far has been positive — I’m assuming it’s because there are other like me. At any rate, I believe in releasing early and often. Upcoming versions will feature full Twitter client functionality for those who prefer the Gridjit environment. If you feel like taking another look at it then, I’d welcome any feedback. If not, thanks for taking the time so far.

    Best,

    Ray

  •     Sarah // Jan 23, 2008 at 2:47 pm

    That is an interesting idea, but Twitter is a very chronological platform. If a conversation gets more than one reply deep, I don’t see how anyone could hope to follow it.

    One of my least favorite things about Twitter is when someone posts fifteen @ replies to people I don’t follow. Pulling people’s tweets out of the timeline would render conversations between people I do follow just as useless as those between people I don’t follow.

    I guess it depends on how you personally use Twitter, who you follow, and how you like to follow them. I’m always a fan of having options.

    They do need to hide the overflow on posts with long links or something though. :)

  •     Pleasure and Pain » Blog Archive » Twitter100 // Jan 30, 2008 at 12:09 am

    [...] Recent Comments portorikan on Auto-flush toilet has a mind of its ownChristopher Fahey on Auto-flush toilet has a mind of its ownChristopher Fahey on The value of personaswhitney on Skitch!Sarah on Gridjit [...]

  •     Pleasure and Pain — Quotably // Mar 24, 2008 at 5:32 pm

    [...] of your friends on one page. Both Gridgit and Twitter100 do this, and I’ve written about them here and here [...]

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