Twitter tanked Thursday . The outage, caused by a targeted denial-of-service attack , had ripple effects continuing into the evening. I wasn’t able to post a tweet with a link in it. I was reminded of an era not long ago , when it was more newsworthy that Twitter was up. In an homage to those less-stable days, I thought I’d outline some of the better alternatives we can take advantage of during those moments Twitter isn’t cooperating. Other options FriendFeed is the first place to start when Twitter is down. Although it’s designed to track updates to all your social networks, it’s a fine communication platform itself. The site will let you chat it up about important topics, follow other friends’ many social-networking updates, and more. It’s an ideal alternative to Twitter. FriendFeed is a fine alternative to Twitter. (Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET) But if you’re looking for something a little more Twitter-like, there are several options. You can try out Plurk . It’s a nice platform, but beware that there are very few users on the site. If people are updating their friends about their lives, they’re not doing it on Plurk. That said, it does provide a really neat timeline display and a unique way to spread your feelings. Instead of giving you full control over your message, it asks you to use one of several keywords, including love, like, wishes, hates, gives, and more. It’s not bad. Plurk has a unique layout. (Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET) If you want a straight Twitter clone with some open-source flavor, Identica is for you. Found at Identi.ca, the site lets you input a message in 140 or fewer characters. You can see what the community is saying by sifting through the timeline. It’s a neat service, but there’s one problem: its community is small. You won’t find many friends on the site. Identica is more or less a Twitter clone with some extra features. (Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET) If you’re looking to only communicate with your Twitter friends, it seems that a service like TweetLater is what you really need. TweetLater allows you to tweet until your heart is content even when Twitter is down. It populates your Twitter stream with all your TweetLater updates when Twitter goes back up. You can also use TweetLater to schedule tweets to go live on your stream at a desired time. On Thursday, TweetLater shut down some of its features to help Twitter fend off the denial-of-service attack. That was a bummer. But it still came in handy for those who wanted to keep tweeting and not miss a moment when Twitter came back up. As its name indicates, TweetLater lets you tweet later. (Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET) And then, of course, there’s Facebook . You can always just chat with your friends on that social network, though it, too, is susceptible to similar outages (and was on

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Refresher course: What to do when Twitter is down



Gregory


