Twitter to introduce a new homepage

Twitter’s home page definitely gets some Zen cred by consisting of little more than a text field that asks, “What are you doing?” But that’s apparently about to change.

According to Kara Swisher at AllThingsD, there will very soon be a major revamp to Twitter.com.

The reason is to give potential Twitter users–you know, the ones who are curious about what these “tweets” on CNN are–a better idea of exactly what the service is and what they can do with it.

This is slated to launch next week.

“You can try (Twitter) out without having to sign up, so you can get an idea of what Twitter is before you use it,” Twitter co-founder Biz Stone told AllThingsD. “We need to do a better job of explaining ourselves to people who hear about us and then have no idea what do to.”

Part of this has gone live already: a section called “Twitter 101,” geared toward businesses that want to use the microblogging service for publicity, marketing, or customer relations. Co-founder Biz Stone announced this in a blog post on Thursday evening.

“We coordinated with business students and writers to surface some interesting findings, best practices, steps for getting started, and case studies,” Stone wrote. “The results demonstrate how customers are getting value out of Twitter and suggest techniques businesses can employ to enhance that value.”

This is important because of troubling (albeit unofficial) statistics that Twitter’s ubiquity may be fleeting. The majority of new users reportedly don’t stick around, and third-party studies have found that a small number of active members are responsible for the vast majority of “tweets.”

Getting a “real” home page could also be key for future revenue opportunities on Twitter’s end. The site is so lightweight that many avid users rarely access it at all, instead using third-party clients like Twhirl or TweetDeck. For Twitter, which still doesn’t have a head of sales, getting people back to its homepage could be the first step in making a buck or two off it.

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Microsoft to fix critical bug in IE

In a rare move, Microsoft on Friday said it would be releasing security updates on Tuesday–outside of its monthly patch cycle–for a critical vulnerability in Internet Explorer and a moderate vulnerability in Visual Studio.

The two security bulletins will address one overall issue and are being released separately “to provide the broadest protections possible to customers,” Microsoft said in a statement.

The vulnerabilities affect Windows 2000, Windows XP, Vista, Windows Server 2003 and 2008, Internet Explorer 6, 7 and 8, Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003, Visual Studio 2005 and 2008 and Visual C++ 2005 and 2008, according to the security bulletin advance notification.

“While we can’t go into specifics about the issue prior to release, we can say that the Visual Studio bulletin will address an issue that can affect certain types of applications,” the statement said. “The Internet Explorer bulletin will provide defense-in-depth changes to Internet Explorer to help provide additional protections for the issues addressed by the Visual Studio bulletin.”

“The Internet Explorer update will also address vulnerabilities rated as critical that are unrelated to the Visual Studio bulletin that were privately and responsibly reported,” Microsoft said.

Customers who are current with their security updates are protected from known attacks related to the updates, the company said. The updates will be released through the Microsoft Update, Windows Update, and Windows Server Update services.

A Webcast to address customer questions is scheduled for Tuesday from 1 p.m. PDT to 2 p.m. at this site.

Microsoft typically releases security patches on a monthly basis, the second Tuesday of every month, and did not say why it is making this rare, out-of-cycle release.

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Twitter correct follower counts – Spammers Are Removed from DB

According to twitter’s recent status updates , the twitter staff have corrected the followers and following counts which were displayed incorrect for some people . In fact many accounts that contained spam tweets were perished or removed from the database , due to which many users have found that their followers – following count has decreased .

Well there is nothing to worry about , since i myself have lost a couple 100 followers . This means that the count you see in your sidebar should match what you see on your follower and following pages.

As said by the twitter team ” No legitimate followings should be affected—we’re just cleaning up artifacts in the system.”

Twitter’s Status update – 23d July

Twitter to release a 101 guide for business

Every day, millions of people use Twitter to create, discover and share ideas with others. Now, people are turning to Twitter as an effective way to reach out to businesses, too. From local stores to big brands, and from brick-and-mortar to internet-based or service sector, people are finding great value in the connections they make with businesses on Twitter.

So what does Twitter do for businesses?

Twitter is a communications platform that helps businesses and their customers do a number of useful things. As a business, you can use it to quickly share information with people interested in your company, gather real-time market intelligence and feedback, and build relationships with customers, partners and other people who care about your company.

So how does it work?

Twitter lets you write and read messages of up to 140 characters, or the very length of this sentence, including all punctuation and spaces. The messages are public and you decide what sort of messages you want to receive – Twitter being a recipient driven information network. In addition, you can send and receive Twitter messages, or tweets, equally well from your desktop or your mobile phone.

So how do businesses use Twitter?

Twitter connects you to your customers right now, in a way that was never before possible. For example, let’s say you work for a custom bike company. If you run a search for your brand, you may find people posting messages about how happy they are that your bike lets them ride in the French Alps—giving you a chance to share tips about cyclist-friendly cafes along their route.

Others may post minor equipment complaints or desired features that they would never bother to contact you about—providing you with invaluable customer feedback that you can respond to right away or use for future planning. Still others may twitter about serious problems with your bikes—letting you offer customer service that can turn around a bad situation.

You don’t have to run a bike shop or a relatively small company to get good stuff out of Twitter. Businesses of all kinds, including major brands, increasingly find that listening and engaging on the service lead to happier customers, passionate advocates, key product improvements and, in many cases, more sales.

Twitter’s Special Guide for Business

‘G-Force’: The attraction is not very strong

A goon squad of guinea pigs in eye-popping 3-D. When you think about the project’s pedigree, it’s weird but oddly inevitable.

And who better to pull off such a feat than family-friendly Disney, which gave us an endearing rodent culinary whiz in Ratatouille in concert with action-meister producer Jerry Bruckheimer (Pirates of the Caribbean)?

The powerhouse coupling means you can count on chases and explosions, plus a distinctly cute and cuddly factor.

The film’s casting, for both its in-the-flesh performances and vocal talent, has some bright spots. Bill Nighy is having fun playing the villainous billionaire, Saber. And the trio of guinea pigs, voiced by Penelope Cruz, Tracy Morgan and Sam Rockwell, are lively.

The script has a few funny lines. For the parents and other adults in the audience, there are grown-up movie allusions. But the look of the cute, computer-generated guinea pigs, hamsters and mice will be the main hit with kids, especially in 3-D.

Zach Galifianakis is Ben, a nerdy scientist. He has trained rodents to work for the federal government as accomplished spies. Not only do they talk, but they also carry out espionage plots. The three guinea pigs do most of the legwork: Darwin (Rockwell) is the no-nonsense leader, Juarez (Cruz) is a sassy martial arts expert, and Blaster (Morgan) is a weapons expert.

The critter experiment is inexplicably shut down by officious federal agents (headed by Will Arnett), just as they are about to crack a case involving an appliance mogul (Nighy). World domination is at stake.

Characters are broadly drawn, and a few have faintly disturbing racist undertones. It’s hard to know whether the trio of chirpy mice in a pet store is ripped off from the mice in 1995′s Babe or simply an homage.

G-Force is unlikely to keep anyone older than 10 on the edge of his seat, and the bathroom humor may annoy adults. But the message of unity, while unoriginal, is consistently sweet.

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