Today we tested the Twitbin Twitter plug-in for the Firefox browser.
The install was frankly a pain, not that it was hard or anything but we had to close and restart the browser, not once, but twice. Maybe this isn’t such a big deal for most but when you have 30 – 50 tabs open at the time, it takes some time to close them all down and restart. Then once you have restarted, you have to go into the plug-ins menu and enable Twitbin, then restart again.
Once installed, it is a pretty good client and it sits in your side bar nicely (where your bookmarks appear when you press (cmd + b or ctrl + b). Not much else on the functionality. You can refresh tweets, choose friends or public timeline and go to the Twitbin homepage.

There is one more thing that stands out with Twitbin that we haven’t seen with other Twitter clients. IT HAS ADS. It isn’t obtrusive or anything but it is the point. The ads are linked back to a company called SocialAd, which when you goto their homepage, looks like they are not fully up and running yet. It gets more interesting though. The SocialAd company is owned by Infinimedia, the same company who has released Twitbin. Hmm. So what it looks like is that Infinimedia is trying to launch an ad network with Twitbin being the first client. Maybe client is the wrong word. If they are able to get mass adoption with Twitbin, they will have an audience and therefore be able to sell ad space and get a start in the ad biz.

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Smart idea I suppose, but will the people accept this and use Twitbin? Or will they throw Twitbin in the bin? Especially when there are at least 7 other twitter plug-ins for firefox that are ad free?
What will we be doing with Twitbin? Well, frankly, firefox is enough of a pig on memory as it is and we don’t want another thing bogging it down. Also, the idea of the ads and Infinimedia launching an ad network on the back of our Twitter usage doesn't sit well. Twitbin is going straight into the bin.
- Twittown Editors's blog





- 111 points

Comments
twitbin password security risk
We have been made aware of a password security risk with twitbin.
more here: http://arunaurl.com/19jm
TwitTown - The Unofficial Twitter Community, Blog and Forums
http://www.twittown.com
To Anonymous. Not really
To Anonymous. Not really ironic about having ads on websites / blogs as it is commonplace now. I think people were shocked to have ads in a plug-in / application that is installed on their computer. Twitbin was the first to do this and therefore the mention.
Thanks for the feedback Brian. Let us know when you do another release and maybe we can focus on the new features next time.
TwitTown - The Unofficial Twitter Community, Blog and Forums
http://www.twittown.com
I don't get it
Pretty ironic how you guys are bashing this neat little plug in. I mean, you're bashing them for ADS?! look at you guys. You created a forum/blog based around twitter and your site is loaded with ads everywhere. I honestly didn't notice the ads at first, plus they are on the bottom, which i never look at. I just don't see the reasoning of your point.
Re: Twitbin review
Hey Twitster,
thanks for the mention, even if it isn't positive. I'm sorry you didn't like the service/tool. Your experience with restarting twice upon install is news to me, none of our beta testers experienced that.
The idea of the ads is to offset the costs of running/developing the tool, I suspect twitter will introduce some form of monetization soon. BTW, if you have any questions about what we're doing, let me know directly next time, I'd be happy to answer any questions directly: brian at twitbin.com I can explain to you what we're working on, etc.
thanks,
Brian
http://www.twitbin.com
I do not see a count of
I do not see a count of characters left to use. With only 140 to begin with, any client should keep a running total left as one types.
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