March 30, 2009 5:32 PM PDT

Twitter tweaks replies, hires ex-Google designer

by Josh Lowensohn
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It didn't take long for Douglas Bowman, Google's former visual design leader, to land a new gig. Creative Capital's Spencer Ante reports that Bowman is taking the helm as creative director for Twitter, a spot that, up to now, was being held down by Twitter co-founder Biz Stone.

Bowman had originally stated that he had something else lined up prior to leaving Google, and it appears that this was it. Neither Bowman's personal blog nor Twitter's has made mention of the hire.

So what does this mean for Bowman, and more importantly Twitter? For Bowman it's a chance to move more than five pixels at a time, and flex his design chops on two things he's good at: in-house advertising and user interface design. Bowman was responsible for much of Google Calendar's design along with some of Blogger's early templates.

That's not the only change at Twitter. Monday afternoon the company rolled out a change to its replies feature which now tracks all mentions of a user's name. The new system will consider a tweet from someone else a reply if your @username is mentioned anywhere, instead of just the beginning of a user's message. The change is also being pushed out through Twitter's application programming interfaces so users can track these references without having to rely on Twitter's built-in search engine.

Josh Lowensohn writes for Webware.com, CNET's blog about Web applications and services. E-mail Josh, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/Josh.
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by anonymous500r March 31, 2009 10:25 AM PDT
I'm so bored of reading about twitter.
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by voyagerfan5761 March 31, 2009 4:52 PM PDT
Just for the record, the Twitter blog does mention Bowman's hiring. <a href="http://blog.twitter.com/2009/03/welcome-doug-bowman.html">The post</a> was published about three hours ago.
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by Torley March 31, 2009 4:53 PM PDT
I'm thrilled to see the "mentioned anywhere" tweak ? I wonder if that was scalably hard to implement, but I doth appreciate having that facilitate multi-replies where a bunch of people ask me the same question.
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by lilykudrow April 2, 2009 11:00 AM PDT
One of the most packed presentations at the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco Wednesday was about how businesses should ? and shouldn?t ? go about using micro-blogging service Twitter.
was reading here about it :
http://www.techunits.com/content/1410/canary_in_the_coal_mine
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