The “supertweets” query grabs trends, then matches them with tweets that reference images from all the major Twitter image services. This is a beta release and we hope you’ll send feedback and report bugs.
By releasing the api - we hope you’ll find new ways to make Twitter more visual with us. We can’t face another day when a compelling tweet references an image that is too far away.
We want to put the SUPER in trends and tweets.
]]>
Here’s what we’re doing - First: We went to the delicious Let’s Be Trends API from Thing Labs makers of the bright-eyed Brizzly. So, trends will be the test bed for the next visualization. Next: We’re grabbing images and tweets from as many of the image posting services related to Twitter as we could find (and there are plenty) Then: We’re assembling them all in this sandbox.
In the mean time, George redesigned the display because the variables of text against absolutely random images was becoming too much to work around. From challenges comes beauty as evidenced in the example above.
Then, we’ll publish it into the iPhone app again and release the API. Like bears waking from hibernation.
]]>
We’re excited by the big opportunities happening for Twitter and what that’s done to stimulate developers to find more and more fun ways to use the electric dialogue. We’re attending the Silicon Valley iPhone Developers’ Meet Up on Monday, October 19th. If you’re going let us know and we can do a mind meld.

Thanks for watching out for us. We love our experiment and the visual surprises we keep getting. The SuperTwitter Flickr set grows from late night random screen captures. Twitter and images is where it’s at, baby.

- Jeff, Paul, George and Drew
]]>First, we just want to thank you for your interest in SuperTwitter. It really has been a labor of love and having interest from anybody else is icing on the cake. While we agree that there could be a lot of features to make it more of a Twitter Swiss Army Knife, for now we’re just really focused on the visual display. With more and more people referencing images with Twitter we discovered the fun when we layered the text on top of the images. It’s random and a very new way of looking at your Twitter channels. On the iPhone, well, it’s just a great screen to watch the show on.
Here’s how you try it out:
A few things to know:
As a beta tester we would appreciate your feedback in the comments of this blog post. Please feel free to tell us anything you like about the application, but we’d especially like to know how you feel about the display. Did you like the simple animation? What would make the image collage better? etc.
If you have a point of view on SuperTwitter it would be great for you to tweet about it too with the #supertwitter hashtag with a link to http://www.supertwitter.com - and if you aren’t already, you can follow us on … Twitter @supertwtr.
We’ll save a special spot in our SuperTwitter hearts for you who were the first to give it a try.
Many Thanks,
Jeff, Paul, George and Drew
]]>We showed the app to some developers at the packed Silicon Valley iPhone Developers’ Meetup in Palo Alto last week and got some great feedback. Thanks to Tim Burks for his energy in organizing the Meetups.
On the visualization front (our favorite place), we’ve been toggling between 2 versions with distinct views that will be merged into a melange of random visual surprises. Srsly. One version is authenticated and displays tweets from those you follow in a basic black and white display with the user picture. The other version is pulling random tweets from TwitGoo that have images referenced and are layered under the tweet. Jeff created a set of screen grabs on Flickr from the more visual version.
Paul has been rising before his lovely daughter Lilia wakes to optimize the database so you get all this goodness faster and more efficiently. Jeff is actually going to meet Paul this Friday for the first time since we started working on SuperTwitter. We haven’t seen each other in over a year and have been doing all of this work through Basecamp, Google Chat, and AIM. I think we spoke once by phone. Crazy.
George was feeling that the website was too dark and has been experimenting with a new home page. We’ll probably get that up in time for the app release. It does seem to more accurately tell the story of the waves of visual snips that you see in SuperTwitter. What do you think?

That should just about cover the news for this week. Thanks for your ongoing interest and if you want to see SuperTwitter in real-time let us know.
- Jeff, Paul, George, Drew and a few cheerleaders
]]>We’re in the running to pitch our app. So, ready or not, we’re going to show off where we are. There is nothing like a deadline to nudge you forward.
Every view we’ve been looking at has it’s appeal so it’s hard to say “done.” Maybe we’ll see what the people at the conference think before we make any big decisions or maybe we’ll launch it with a choice of views
We’ll let you know how it goes.
]]>