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Reportage: Turn Twitter into a "Radio Tuner"

Written by Sarah Perez / May 28, 2009 7:22 AM / 12 Comments

Reportage is a brand-new Twitter client for the iPhone which, according to the company, turns Twitter into a radio tuner. In this case, they're using the phrase "radio tuner" as an analogy to describe how the client operates - it doesn't actually play music. Rather, it lets you "tune in" to the people you follow on Twitter as if they were each their own radio station.

Reportage is Radically Different

There have to be hundreds of Twitter clients out there now for everything from the desktop, to the mobile, to the web. However, there's something they all have in common; they display Twitter posts as a stream of updates where everyone's updates are mixed in together as they're created.

With Reportage, though, the concept is very different. Instead of watching a stream, you can easily move between different users on Twitter and watch each one of them individually.

World vs. Stars

After you install the app and authenticate with Twitter, the main screen, called "World" is populated with the people who you follow on Twitter. Using a radio-like dial at the bottom of the screen, you can scroll through these folks as if you were selecting different radio stations on an old-fashioned stereo.

Of course, if you follow a lot of folks - or, heck, even if you follow anything more than a small handful - scrolling through your Twitter friends in this way would be far too cumbersome. That's why you'll want to use the "Stars" feature instead.

The "Stars option," available from another button at the bottom of the screen, is a group of your favorites which you can customize. To add someone to your Stars, you do so from their profile page, or so the app advises. Unfortunately, I have to admit that it took me a minute to find the setting.

You see, when you tap on a person's avatar, you'll be taken to a page of their tweets. It's here where I expected to find the "star" button, but it wasn't displayed. In order to see the option, what you have to do is tap on one of that person's tweets and only then will you see the option to add them to your stars. Alternately, you can double-tap on their icon to be taken to said profile page. That's actually a much quicker way of doing things and, to be honest, the app should probably note this is how it's done.

Why Would You Want This?

Once you have a limited group of favorites (stars) set up, you can then scroll through the dial and tune into each user individually. Clearly, this is not the way you're going to interact with Twitter on an everyday basis, but it's a fabulous way to get caught up on your friends' tweet history after you've taken some time away from the service (and let's admit it - we do that every now and then, no matter how Twitter-addicted we are). In fact, we can't think of a better way to quickly review all the recent tweets from a select group. Even in clients like TweetDeck which allows for grouping, you're not going to get as complete a history as you would with Reportage.

The Reportage app is available for $2.99 in the iTunes App Store.

Comments

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  1. Seems different, a little more stalkerish but I can understand the concept. Especially to see how some brands or people interact with others on Twitter. Could see this being good research for companies.

    Posted by: Craig | May 28, 2009 8:41 AM



  2. Tell us about the features, Sarah.

    Posted by: Christopher Harley Posted on FriendFeed   | May 28, 2009 8:55 AM



  3. You must be about read to kill yourself...

    Posted by: sofarsoSeán Posted on FriendFeed   | May 28, 2009 8:55 AM



  4. @sofarsoSean: wow, that's mean

    Posted by: Sarah Perez Posted on FriendFeed   | May 28, 2009 8:56 AM



  5. @Christopher: click the link - I already did :)

    Posted by: Sarah Perez Posted on FriendFeed   | May 28, 2009 8:56 AM



  6. LOL no I just meant how frustrating Twitter can be at times It makes me want to do myself in. Not meant to be mean sorry. Especially if your app works well.

    Posted by: sofarsoSeán Posted on FriendFeed   | May 28, 2009 9:05 AM



  7. @sofarsoSean: gotcha. It's not *my* app though, I'm just playing w/it

    Posted by: Sarah Perez Posted on FriendFeed   | May 28, 2009 9:33 AM



  8. Thanks for the review Sarah.
    Martin

    Posted by: Martin Dufort | May 28, 2009 10:01 AM



  9. So many twitter clients out there, I wonder how many more are going to be developed.

    Posted by: twitter backgrounds | May 28, 2009 1:15 PM



  10. I have tried it and its great. Reportage performs a simple taks very very well. Its useful thats all there is to it.

    Posted by: Scott Lake | May 28, 2009 5:16 PM



  11. Sounds great to me! Seems like something that could do well free, if people care about it, and then have ads contextual to the people who are uber important to them - presumably some of those topics would be as well. I'm pushing on $20 in iPhone app charges this month and am a touch hesitant to buy another one for $3.

     Posted by: Marshall Kirkpatrick Author Profile Page | May 29, 2009 11:19 PM



  12. @markshallk Check your for a DM from me. Cheers Martin

    Posted by: Martin Dufort | June 4, 2009 6:24 PM



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