Skip to main content

Get Ready for Twitter Everywhere…Er, @Anywhere

Image used with permission by copyright holder

At this year’s SXSW festival in Austin, Twitter CEO Evan Williams unveiled @Anywhere, a new set of tools aimed at Twitter partner sites—think media outlets, retailers, celebrities, and other big names—to embed Twitter feeds and functionality in their sites without making people rush off to Twitter.com to say what they really think in 140 characters or less. The idea is to enable Twitter users to send and receive tweets while they’re already visiting these other sites, instead of popping back to the main Twitter site or turning to a dedicated Twitter application. And rather than being complicated to implement, Williams says it’ll just take a few lines of JavaScript.

“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,” wrote Twitter co-founder Biz Stone in the company blog. “Twitter has proven to be compelling in a variety of ways. With @anywhere, Web site owners and operators will be able to offer visitors more value with less heavy lifting.”

Twitter hasn’t said when it expects to launch @Anywhere, but says it’ll have over a dozen major partners at launch, including Yahoo, the New York Times, YouTube, Amazon, Bing, Citysearch, Digg, eBay, MSNBC, The Huffington Post, Salesforce.com, Meebo, and AdvertisingAge. Twitter did not offer any details of the financial arrangements with these launch partners.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Hacker sent to jail for huge 2020 Twitter breach
A Twitter logo graphic.

A British man who took part in a high-profile Twitter hack in 2020 was handed a five-year jail term by a New York federal court on Friday.

Joseph O’Connor, 24, had pled guilty in May to four counts of computer hacking, wire fraud, and cyberstalking. He was also ordered to pay $794,000, the amount that he nabbed in the crypto crime.

Read more
Get ready: AI generated-GIFs might be coming soon
Nvidia's "teddy bear is playing the electric guitar" gif demo.

With chatbots and text-to-image generators taking the internet by storm, the next frontier of AI might be text-to-video generators.

Nvidia recently published a research paper called "High-Resolution Video Synthesis with Latent Diffusion Models" on its experiments at its Toronto AI Lab that details how it uses Stable Diffusion to create a tool that can make moving art results from text prompts.

Read more
Elon Musk setting up generative-AI project at Twitter, report claims
A digital image of Elon Musk in front of a stylized background with the Twitter logo repeating.

Elon Musk is embarking on his own artificial intelligence (AI) project within Twitter, Business Insider reported on Tuesday.

With so much attention currently lavished upon generative AI tools such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard chatbots, it’s perhaps little wonder that Musk -- a man who appears to love technology and attention in equal measure -- wants a piece of the action.

Read more