I decided to sit back and watch for a bit as the blogosphere belched out a nice robust “bitchmeme” about FriendFeed killing Twitter. As far as I can tell, there is only one coherent thing to pull from all of this: People are very angry about Twitter’s downtime.

Certainly that is reasonable. The service’s reliability has gone from bad to worse, culminating in an admission that it isn’t sure what is wrong and that it will basically need to be re-built. As anyone who has read any of my dozen or so posts about Twitter over the past couple weeks will realize, I’m annoyed as well.

I’m annoyed, but thinking rationally.

FriendFeed is not going to kill Twitter. It’s a nice thought that we could already have a service which many of us use that will replace our beloved, but failing Twitter — but that simply isn’t the case. FriendFeed and Twitter are different services. Each do different things. Each has a different purpose. It’s that simple.

In fact, if anything is going to kill Twitter, I’m in agreement with Steven Hodson of WinExtra: It’s Twitter.

As I said last week, despite Twitter’s issues, I have no plans on leaving the service, I still find it too useful. However, if Twitter is really unable to get its act together, others will start to leave. This will cause a chain reaction that yes, will eventually prompt me to stop using the service.

The only thing Twitter has to fear, is Twitter itself.

I find it interesting as well that all of this Twitter-killing talk has led to a backlash of sorts against FriendFeed, a service, which the last time I checked, didn’t have a mission statement about becoming the new Twitter (even though it is schooling Twitter in search capabilities). One of the most vocal in this regard was Steve Gillmor, whose transcribed lucid dream on TechCrunch says nothing if not that he doesn’t like FriendFeed — for a number of reasons, the most clear of which seems to be an annoyance that so many people do like it.

FriendFeed is a useful service. Perhaps not as useful as Webomatica thinks, but useful none-the-less. I’ve been very bullish on it since back when it was in closed beta and I wrote it up on my personal site ParisLemon, back in October. Instead of comparing it to Twitter at that time, I found the more apt comparison to be to Facebook’s News Feed. The difference being that I found FriendFeed more compelling because it allowed you to create a stream of your data outside of Facebook’s walled garden. The recent steps by Facebook to emphasize importing 3rd party site data into your News Feed, suggests this comparison wasn’t far off.

One aspect that makes Twitter so compelling is its simplicity. FriendFeed is not as simple and continues to grow more complex with the addition of features such as “Rooms.” To use FriendFeed as a Twitter-replacement would not be so straight-forward and would be doing FriendFeed, and all the work its team has put in, a disservice. It can do a lot more than Twitter, but partially because of that, I will never use it as my go-to mobile site despite Robert Scoble’s insistence that it should be.

What I want from Twitter is an extremely simple, extremely fast site that I can use to communicate with people quickly, and more importantly, on the go. I would gladly pay for a premium version of the service that assured me uptime and perhaps some advanced features such as geotagging and native picture and video upload functionality (that worked only on a click-to-expand option in the Twitter stream so as not to muddy up the simplicity of the stream). I wouldn’t pay $20-a-month that Jason Calacanis suggests, but I’d maybe pay $5 or something like $50-a-year. I already pay $25-a-year for Flickr, and I use Twitter a lot more.

FriendFeed meanwhile, will continue to be a main hub when I’m not on the go and have some time to get a bigger picture of what people I know are up to around the web — and if I want to have a discussion about any of that. As I see it, there is certainly some level of truth to the thought that FriendFeed is getting too noisy as more and more people join the service (something which I was shocked people weren’t doing late last year). I suspect that myself, and a lot of other users, need to get better at using the “hide” functionality on FriendFeed. Something which Louis Gray wrote an excellent guide on.

In closing, let me just reiterate: FriendFeed is not going to kill Twitter. Each service provides something different, and at least for me, compliment one another in some regards. If Twitter does die sometime in the coming years and FriendFeed is blamed, I’ll be calling for a DNA test. I think we’ll find Twitter’s own prints on the gun that it was shot with.

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  1. May 25th, 2008
    6:32 am

    links for 2008-05-25 | mad dog in the fog said:

    [...] The only thing Twitter has to fear, is Twitter itself » VentureBeat “FriendFeed is not going to kill Twitter. Each service provides something different, and at least for me, compliment one another in some regards.” (tags: friendfeed twitter) [...]

  2. May 25th, 2008
    10:20 am

    thing one picture said:

    [...] are very angry about Twitter??s downtime. …Facebook Will Be the Mainstream Everything ReadWriteWebhttp://venturebeat.com/2008/05/24/the-only-thing-twitter-has-to-fear-is-twitter-itself/Tony Romo earned Ashlee Simpson??s family 1.4 mill by attending wedding When Tony Romo went to lunch [...]

  3. May 25th, 2008
    6:36 pm

    Lorsque Twitter a des difficultés à faire face à la croissance « nomade sur mon divan said:

    [...] The only thing Twitter has to fear, is Twitter itself [...]

  4. June 1st, 2008
    1:32 am

    links for 2008-06-01 | stuart henshall said:

    [...] The only thing Twitter has to fear, is Twitter itself » VentureBeat Would you pay? Didn’t think so. (tags: twitter) [...]

  5. June 6th, 2008
    12:48 am

    FriendFeed takes noisy tracks and makes a best-of collection » VentureBeat said:

    [...] FriendFeed isn’t going to kill Twitter, but it’s ability to solve problems and evolve with seeming ease continues to make Twitter look bad. Tags: co:Friendfeed, co:Twitter SHARETHIS.addEntry({ title: “FriendFeed takes noisy tracks and makes a best-of collection”, url: “http://venturebeat.com/2008/06/06/friendfeed-takes-noisy-tracks-and-makes-a-best-of-collection/” }); Sphere It Digg this story! venturebeat227:http://venturebeat.com/2008/06/06/friendfeed-takes-noisy-tracks-and-makes-a-best-of-collection/ GA_googleFillSlot(”VentureBeat_DigitalMedia_MRec_BetweenStories_300×250″); var disqus_url = ‘http://venturebeat.com/2008/06/06/friendfeed-takes-noisy-tracks-and-makes-a-best-of-collection/ ‘; var disqus_title = ‘FriendFeed takes noisy tracks and makes a best-of collection’; var disqus_message = ‘With some services, a strength is also a weakness. Take the micro-messaging service Twitter for example. It’s becoming more and more popular because more and more people are using it. However, because of this popularity, fundamental flaws in its architecture have been exposed and the service is constantly down now.%0AThe conversational content site FriendFeed has [...]%0A%0A %0A %0A ‘; View the entire comment thread. Trackback URL [...]

  6. June 6th, 2008
    12:49 am

    fear itself said:

    [...] the money here - Twitter is gonna blow its opportunity if the service’s reliability issues persist. http://venturebeat.com/2008/05/24/the-only-thing-twitter-has-to-fear-is-twitter-itself/Fear ItselfImages of fear with hope at the end of the tunnel. What is …3 min 17 sec - [...]

  7. June 9th, 2008
    4:11 pm

    Microblogging: segnalazioni del 10.06.08 | Microblogging.it said:

    [...] The only thing Twitter has to fear, is Twitter itself [...]

  8. June 24th, 2008
    1:10 pm

    Twitter finally gets its new round of funding; “very strong” valuation » VentureBeat said:

    [...] it really matters, it’s useful with or without mainstream usage. That is why I believe that the only thing that can kill Twitter, is Twitter itself. It has the right combination of users, simplicity and developers building apps off of it, that no [...]

  9. June 26th, 2008
    1:25 am

    InGameNow: Sports junkies get their own Twitter » VentureBeat said:

    [...] not going to kill Twitter, but if Twitter kills itself (by not fixing its problems) or if it can appeal to enough hard-core sports fans, InGameNow should [...]

  10. June 28th, 2008
    4:56 pm

    Twitter or FriendFeed? There can be more than one. » VentureBeat said:

    [...] as Facebook isn’t going to kill MySpace (both will continue to co-exist), FriendFeed isn’t going to kill Twitter. It’s just not going to [...]

  11. July 2nd, 2008
    10:22 pm

    Twitter refugees find a new home (at least for this week): Identi.ca » VentureBeat said:

    [...] is why I’ve said in the past that the only thing that can kill Twitter is Twitter itself. If the service keeps failing to work, people will leave not out of choice, but out of necessity. I [...]

  12. July 7th, 2008
    9:14 pm

    Twitter gets its sexy back. And by “sexy” I mean users. » VentureBeat said:

    [...] still of the mindset that the only thing Twitter has to fear is Twitter itself. That is to say that no other service is going to kill it, not even a more open clone like [...]

  13. July 24th, 2008
    2:15 pm

    How has Twitter stayed #1 despite themselves? - New Comm Biz - New media strategies for business said:

    [...] The only thing Twitter has to fear, is Twitter itself [...]