You might have heard about it: Twitter, a free social networking service that links people together through frequent mini-blog posts, is the next big trend online. And we're using it to reach our readers.
We've been building our Twitter page, twitter.com/thepittnews, and we send out breaking news alerts, headlines with links to stories and sports scores through Twitter.
The alerts get sent to our "followers:" other Twitter users who've chosen to be part of our network and receive our alerts. On the flip side, we follow a bunch of Twitterers, including some of the major news outlets -- the New York Times and CNN are just two examples of sending out news updates many times a day.
Typical Twitter users can send out their statuses throughout the day, a la Facebook, or they can respond to other Tweets they see. Many of our staffers, including me, have started their own accounts. Let me just say, if you like Facebook, this is absolutely the way to go.
It's like constantly being plugged in to the people and news you want to know, and being able to get to that information easily or join the conversation.
It takes the best of the Web developments you've grown up with and rolled them into one: chat rooms, instant messaging, text messaging, Facebook newsfeeds, blogs and RSS feeds -- Twitter hearkens back to them all.
The best thing about Twitter is it's versatility -- the trick to Twitter is learning how to use it without going to the actual Twitter Web pages. Instead, users can follow or Tweet through text messaging, widgets downloaded for their PC desktops, plug-ins on cell phones or through a number of other social networking sites.
Because many of Pitt's classrooms -- especially the Nationality Rooms -- aren't conducive to

To get started, just visit Twitter.com. Remember to follow us @ThePittNews.
If you have a cell phone with Internet access, you can get hooked into Twitter using a handy plug-in like TwitterBerry for Blackberries or Twitter for iPhone.
Even though Twitter started as a small site more than three years ago, it's quickly growing and pushing into the mainstream. Seriously, it's the next Facebook.
Here's the Post-Gazette story on Twitter, which ran on their front page today.
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