What we found on the web about GroupTweet
GroupTweet lets a group of people subscribe to a single Twitter account, and get bounce-back messaging to everyone in the group. This is how accounts like @podcamp and @von work ...
Twitter is great for casually communicating with lots of friends at once, but when a little privacy is desired, it’s hardly the best means. GroupTweet.com is a new site that ...
My first reaction to GroupTweet was: What’s the point? It seemed like an indirect way to send and recieve tweets with people I already communicate with on Twitter.
Twitter, the moment-by-moment status update ("What are you doing now?") site that's the buzz among social networking circles, was shaken by a potentially embarrassing foul-up ...
I’m happy to announce the launch of GroupTweet, a service that allows Twitter users to send private messages to specific groups of friends. This is a small project that I threw ...
Here is the campaign and lobby tool for group of collaborators working on a project. I am trying to hack out some case studies of people that are using it for advocacy please let ...
Support customer conversations across the Web. Overheard lists out the most recent Twitter posts ("tweets") related to this company. Anyone, employee or customer, can convert a ...
Twitter in the enterprise ... A week into using Twitter and my experience so far has been overwhelmingly positive. It takes some getting used to and was very disruptive at first.
Here is what users have to say about GroupTweet

Welcome to CWAnswers

CWAnswers is your guide to the sprawling world wide web. The directory aims to provide a useful guide made by users. You can share your knowledge as well - simply register and edit your first entry. For questions just contact the team at support - at - cwanswers.com.

Weblinks

Top 10

Things you find nowhere else.

Comments

You must be logged in to post a comment.

No comments yet on this topic. Be the first one!
These recent articles mention GroupTweet
Beta News
Twitter, the moment-by-moment status update ("What are you doing now?") site that's the buzz among social networking circles, was shaken by a potentially embarrassing foul-up. Especially popular among Silicon Valley's big names and linkable...