- Post to Twitter: Send an e-mail to your secret TwitterMail address. The body of the message will be published in your Twitter Profile. For a normal message, you should always leave the subject-line empty.
- Send photo's to Twitter!: Make a photo with your mobile phone, e-mail it to Twittermail and we will post it amongs your message to Twitter! MaGet new replies in your mailbox
- Get new replies in your mailbox: If a friend send you a post on twitter (by using @yourusername) we will send it to your emailaddress. You can enable/disable this in your settings. ke sure you send your photo as attachment.
- Get the Timeline: Send a message with 'Friends' or 'f' as the subject and you will receive one message with the last 20 posts from all of your friends.
- Send a book:At Twitter.com you only have 140 characters to tell your story. But if you use TwitterMail we will keep the full message here and post the first 140 characters to Twitter with a 'Read More' link at the end.
- Renewed: Future Tweets: Schedule your posts: Our Tweet in the future feature has been rewritten! Now you simply use in the subject line '+3 hours, 2 minutes' to post your tweet in 3 hours and 2 minutes. Make your friends believe you are Twittering day and night.
- Twitter down? Use TwitterMail: Twitter.com offers a great service but sometimes the servers can be down. When Twitter.com is down, we will publish your tweet as soon as Twitter.com is back.
What they says:
Here is an idea: Lets register twittermail.com (yes, it is available) and use MailTwitterPHP to set up a service for users of Twitter to redirect email to their twitter account.
Get it?
A user submits his or her Twitter account details at twittermail.com and gets a unique new emailaddress (alskhdftyyeoindhdfiewosnshjfkdfs@twittermail.com).
From that moment on each message this user emails to this unique and secret emailaddress is posted to their own Twitter account.And from that moment, Bram Kok and Lennaert Ekelmans from the Netherlands made Twittermail in June 2007. Now 1,5 year later, we're happy to announce our second version of Twittermail.com. We processed more than 1 million e-mails (although most of them are spam) and more than 18.000 people are using the service.
By the way, does anybody has any idea about setting the latest Twitter update as my "Custome Message" on GTalk or vice versa?
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