Art a’Twitter
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
The coolest thing about open communities is the unexpected idea that comes of all the interaction. First, take a status message tool with a bunch of active users. Second, have one of those new users be a programmer. Third, make sure the host site releases an API to allow other developers to plug into the community. Fourth, be inspired by some of the things already out there. Bam! TwitterMosaic.
by Kevin Makice
A Ph.D student in informatics at Indiana University, Kevin is rich in spirit. He wrestles and reads with his kids, does a hilarious Christian Slater imitation and lights up his wife's days. He thinks deeply about many things, including but not limited to basketball, politics, microblogging, parenting, online communities, complex systems and design theory. He didn't, however, think up this profile.
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The coolest thing about open communities is the unexpected idea that comes of all the interaction. First, take a status message tool with a bunch of active users. Second, have one of those new users be a programmer. Third, make sure the host site releases an API to allow other developers to plug into the community. Fourth, be inspired by some of the things already out there. Bam!

Powered by Andrea Denzler’s AndreaMosaic, a programmer new to Twitter created a tool to turn 20,000 user profile photos into the building blocks of art. Almost overnight, he turned his new account into a friend haven, going from a request for 20 friends on June 11 to over 10,000 1500 in a couple days. Less than a week into his fifteen minutes, twitter_mosaic still has to figure out what he wants to do with the interest. At present, he’s accepting suggestions for images to make into mosaics as comments in a blog post. That will probably become ineffective pretty quickly.
This image, sent to me by my human RSS feed (Tyler) this afternoon, was very eye-catching:

3 Comments
Cool, thanks for the article. I don’t have 10,000 followers quite yet
Just over 1,500 so far. You’re right, I’m still looking for an interesting path for the project, but so far user suggestions are doing pretty well. But, if interest holds up like it has this week, I might have trouble paying my bandwidth bill!
Ah, yes, sorry about swelling your numbers prematurely. I often confuse “friends” (10,920) for “followers” (1539). Corrected above.
Good luck with the bandwidth!
Ah, this is how Twitter_Mosaic found me.