The Government has offered Australia's three mobile operators, and vividwireless, renewal of their existing spectrum allocated on 15 year licences in the late 90s and early 2000s at set prices, while the Government expects to rake in $3 billion.
read moreFriday, 15 January 2010 00:03
New web service offers another option to feed your blog to twitterOn these days having a presence on social-media networks has become a very important part of any business and the micro blogging service twitter has become the main player in this area; therefore submitting your blog entries or published stories to twitter is a very important task in order to keep yourself in contact with your readers and bring traffic to your site.
Twitterlive.net is a web 2.0 service that let you create a channel that feeds your blog to twitter, track the clicks and collects real-time traffic data. This service offer great benefits for both publishers and users; for publishers because they have their own information channel and for users because they can quickly keep up informed with the latest headline news.
Twitterlive.net with its innovative approach to create a stable and reliable service has made the effort of publishing your blog to twitter an easy three step process:
1. Sign up to Twitterlive by creating a new account or login with your OpenID
2. Add a new feed channel using the rss url from your site
3. Watch the stats and track how many clicks your stories get
"Twitter is not the one and only channel, but the fact remains that it is one of the most significant in terms of outreach, and the one where you can actively look out for readers instead of just sitting with your arms folded waiting for them to waltz into your blog. Come to think of it, that image holds some relevance if you think about it – this service will let you fold your arms once you have set everything up and your blog’s feed starts being tweeted out" said the KillerStarups.com review about the service.
Twitterlive was built by Sergio Tobon who is an experienced .Net Web Application developer passionate about twitter, web services and social media in general. His previous startups include the popular service pinmaps.net

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