Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/06/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Tina, part of it is a typo. The program is called Tweetdeck. I 'follow' a number of people and organizations on Twitter (http://twitter.com/). I don't have anything much of interest to say so I very rarely 'tweet' but a number of news organizations, photographers, photography sites, food and wine sites, and on and on, do. I use a program called TweetDeck (http://www.tweetdeck.com/) to collect the postings (tweets) by the people and organizations I follow, and it scrolls them in a single column almost continuously in a corner of one monitor. Keeping an eye on it is multitasking at its worst, but I've always been a news and knowledge junkie and this just takes it to the next level. As you might expect, a young nephew told me about it several years ago and it took me a while to learn to use it. Now I follow it a lot, but of course my nephew (who is in the industry) now tells me it has about outlived its usefulness and something else is about to come along. <sigh> --Bob ==On Tue, Jun 8, 2010 at 5:50 PM, Tina Manley <images at comporium.net> wrote: > Robert - > > What in the world is a tweedeck scroll? ?I'm so far behind, I'm just now > figuring out Facebook!! > > Tina > > On Tue, Jun 8, 2010 at 6:47 PM, Robert D. Baron <rbaron at > concentric.net>wrote: > >> This may be of interest to one or more of you; Blurb is putting on a >> webinar that will cover color management and layout to make a Blurb >> book directly from Adobe Lightroom: >> >> >> http://blog.blurb.com/index.php/2010/06/04/sign-up-for-our-june-24-webinar-lightroom-to-booksmart/ >> >> or >> >> http://tinyurl.com/24mryok >> >> (I got this tidbit via a tweet from Sean McCormack of Lightroom Blog. >> I really do learn a lot by keeping a tweedeck scroll open and >> following a few select people and organizations. ?I never thought I'd >> say that, but there it is.) >> >> --Bob >>