Twitter March 15 unveiled @anywhere, a service that will extend
much of the functionality of its successful microblogging platform to
third-party sites such as Amazon.com, Microsoft Bing, Digg and eBay.
As the name implies, @anywhere comprises a set of frameworks
for adding the Twitter experience -- sending tweets, retweets and following
users -- to any Website without shuttling users directly to Twitter.com.
Website publishers will only need to add a few lines of
JavaScript to their sites to enable this functionality, wrote Twitter co-founder Biz Stone in a
blog post. Developers won't even have to leverage the Twitter APIs to leverage
@anywhere.
Twitter has attracted heavy hitters in the digital world
to @anywhere. Initial participants include Amazon, AdAge, Bing, Citysearch,
Digg, eBay, The Huffington Post, Meebo, MSNBC.com, The New York Times,
Salesforce.com, Yahoo, and YouTube.
"When we're ready to launch, imagine being able to
follow a New York Times journalist directly from her byline, tweet about a
video without leaving YouTube, and discover new Twitter accounts while visiting
the Yahoo home page -- and that's just the beginning," Stone wrote.
Yahoo said it will use @anywhere to let "users authorize
Twitter data sharing with their Yahoo ID in a way that empowers them to consume
their Twitter feeds on Yahoo and to share Yahoo content to Twitter."
Stone's fellow co-founder Evan Williams introduced the
service at the South by Southwest (SXSW) show Monday afternoon,
prompting disappointment and apathy from many attendees who expected Williams to discuss
Twitter's long-awaited advertising platform.
One thing that shouldn't be overlooked is how @anywhere
resembles Facebook Connect, the service for letting users log into Websites
using their Facebook credentials. More than 80,000 sites are using Facebook
Connect, making the platform a certified hit.
Forrester Research analyst Augie Ray agreed that
@anywhere is much like Facebook Connect because it permits sites to add social
elements that leverage the content and networks that already exist on Twitter.
However, Ray thinks @anywhere may offer sites a somewhat different
value proposition than does Facebook Connect.
"For example, while both permit easy sharing of content to one's
networks, Twitter @anywhere seems poised to do more distribution of content
across the Web. A lot of details remain to be revealed, but it seems Twitter is
interesting in engaging people where they surf, not just on Twitter.com or in
Twitter clients.
"The idea of allowing people to access relevant,
real-time information from the Twitter network wherever they surf is a bit
different than I've seen done with Facebook Connect, and it promises to open up
the Twitter experience to people who as of yet may not have seen a reason to
visit, register and participate."
Twitter's @anywhere,
covered on TechMeme here, comes just days after Twitter
turned on its geolocation feature.