Hotpoint WIXXE127 – the strangest Twitter trending topic?

No-one has managed to pinpoint the cause yet, but somehow a fairly non-descript Hotpoint washing machine has become the hottest Twitter trending topic in the UK at the moment.

And now the meme has taken on a life of its own, with people riffing on every popular trend to join in on the washing machine excitement. Forget the Apple iPad, it’s the Hotpoint that everyone is interested in!

HotpointTrendingonTwitter

If anyone does have a clue about how this happened, I’d love to know – and if it turns out to be part of an actual campaign, I’ll be both mightily surprised and impressed!

Not an engaging start for empowerment in Peterborough

Apparently a new online project is aiming to empower people in Peterborough. Seems like a good idea to me, seeing as I living and raising a family there when I’m not in London or on a train in between.

Only thing is, so far it has 19 members, with about 5 listed as being in Peterborough, or even relatively nearby (e.g. Cambridge). That bodes well. Better to be empowered by a bunch of people at least 50 minutes away by train rather be ruled by a Government 50 minutes away by train.

I’m also a bit worried that the first I heard of it was actually through the always good Johnnie Moore’s Weblog, who had picked it up from Kevin Harris. So the empowerment of my home town is taking place on a Ning-powered social networking site, and the only reason I ever knew it was happening was because a London-based person I follow because of his marketing knowledge mentioned it?

No wonder their Social Media project has 5 members and no activity in the last 10 days.

So if I’ve only found it via an obscure link, apparently missing a Peterborough event 12 days ago, and I spent about 10 hours+ every day on websites, social networks, blogs and RSS feeds, how in the name of chuff will anyone else find it?

Apparently I must have missed the launch at a VIP in London of this two-year partnership by the RSA and Arts Council East to

‘be made up of a number of programmes based around the arts and social change, an area-based learning curriculum, a sustainable citizenship campaign, user-centred drug services and the use of online social media.’

All very laudable, but:

I love social media. I work in social media. I try to aid my colleagues and organisation in effectively using social media.

Do we need a programme to get people in Peterborough using social media?

Nope.

If you want to do something to improve engagement, involvement and enjoyment in Peterborough it shouldn’t involve social media. People who aren’t in marketing don’t even know wtf social media is, let along feel like they want citizen empowerment through it.

They might use Facebook, or Twitter (I bet @simoncollister and @pjeedai might have some interesting views on this as fellow Peterboroughians)

But if you want involvement they should be able to get involved by throwing a note wrapped round a housebrick if needs be. Or at least use SMS that most people from 5-65 understand. Or Facebook, seeing as most of the online population are on it, know about it, and trust it.

I’m sure it’s all very lovely, and has wonderful ideals behind it, but I’m not sure an interdisciplinary arts event would be the natural thing we might be crying out for in the Fens. How about something which might attract the interest of the 17-year-old lads riding round on scooters of an evening, bored out of their mind, for example? Or letting me SMS to organise the bins to be collected when they’re actually full, for crying out loud. Let people make a practical change!

There are huge possibilities for social networks to empower people, but if it starts like this, don’t be surprised if a grumpy bloke with a crash helmet avatar signs up and starts being critical, now he’s found the bloody thing.

How you could be testing the official BlackBerry Twitter app

A new BlackBerry Beta Zone has been launched for beta testers to volunteer to trial official apps from BlackBerry maker RIM – in addition to the existing App World Test Center which is for both RIM and third-party applications.

If you’re in the UK, U.S. or Canada you can sign up, and ReadWriteWeb spotted a phone running the upcoming official Twitter application for BlackBerry in the banner image on the new site. There’s no official mention of the Twitter app in the blog post announcing the launch of Beta Zone, but it has to be pretty much guaranteed as the first place to play with it in the wild.

Previously listed features match other third-party apps with url-shortening, photo-sharing, push messages, message list integration, filtered search by geo-location, and rumours of profile editing, Twitter lists, and on OS6.0 Twitter/BlackBerry contact sync.

The integration between Twitter and BlackBerry services makes sense – it’s one of the major selling points of a BlackBerry, highlighted in the concept of a “Super App” which RIM co-CEO and founder Mike Lazaridis talked about in his keynote at Mobile World Congress. One of the key characteristics, as outlined in a BlackBerry blog post outlining the talk?

‘Apps can add custom menu items and data to the Inbox, Address Book and Calendar and can be called into action immediately from those, and other, apps on the device – always one-click away.’

Now there’s a potential edge for BlackBerry. Inbox, Address Book, Calendar and maybe BlackBerry Messenger integration?

Business users with complete Twitter integration at a time when companies are embracing social media more thoroughly than ever before?

Google uses Twitter in Chinese search results

Twitter search results are now being indexed and displayed by Google to Chinese users, as reported in the Los Angeles Times.

It effectively gets around the nine-month block of Twitter in China, and the timing is no accident as Google has stopped censoring Chinese search results and redirects users from mainland China to Google.com.hk.

It means that tweets can now appear in Google search results for terms which are popular on Twitter. The LA Times reports that on Thursday morning, it included ‘how to circumvent China’s Internet firewall, why Google decided to exit China and a vaccine scandal unfolding in central China’

Although Twitter results are now part of Google search in the rest of the world, the introduction at this time seems to be a further attempt to strengthen Google’s case against the Chinese government. But given that China has the most effective attempt at a repressive, censored internet, it will be interesting to see whether any technology is introduced to strip the content back out before users can see it – it’s already managing to block uncensored searches for terms such as ‘Amnesty’ or ‘Dalai’ in just a day after the redirect to google.com.hk took place.

Google has claimed that the Twitter results had already been available for a week as part of a global rollout, and the release is unrelated to other events.

Despite the original cyber attacks on Google and fallout which has followed, the search company has said it will continue research and development work and its advertising sales team in China.

This use of Twitter feels like a small move in a game of chess between the search giant and an ideology which isn’t going to back down easily.