I was recently looking at some of TweetChat‘s site traffic and saw a few interesting uses of my service from three high-profile sources.
CBS
CBS daytime talk show, The Talk is using TweetChat for a “Tweet Up Tuesday” where viewers discuss a question in real time as the show is live on the air.
It is always cool to see something you created being used for reasons you never could have imagined. Now if I could just come up with a business model…
If you are looking for something to do during the halftime show of the Superbowl tonight then you might want to checkout Epic Meal Time with all your friends.
Highly quotable and some of the funniest stuff I have seen in a while…
For the past 24 hours I tested running some ads at the top of every page on TweetChat.
This was an experiment to see if I could raise a little extra money to fund future development without being too annoying to all the awesome people that use the site.
In short, it was a failure.
I found a technology partner to put an ad at the top of the page, hoping it wouldn’t be too obtrusive. The ad even had a button on the far left that allowed people to remove it from the page if they desired (though this was not without its issues).
Um ad on TweetChat says “Cleans Your Balls”. Just tht I wd share that w/u (Axe shower gel) #lrnchat
Yikes.
These issues made it quite apparent the experiment was a failure.
The last thing I want to do is make TweetChat less functional, less useful and less fun for users. I would rather it go toes up.
Sorry for the snafu. It was an experiment, it failed.
I will still be looking for ways to help fund future development. There will certainly be failures to come, but I do listen and care about how people use TweetChat. Like anything I make, I want it to be the best it can with the resources I have.