I am really enjoying the tweets from @MarsPhoenix. Ofcourse this isn't the actual robot sending Twitter updates from millions of miles away, the researchers tweeting on it's behalf are definitely engaging in some interesting conversations. This is one fantastic example of how large organizations can engage in Social Media.
The thought that we are having a conversation with a tiny bot makes the whole experience rather exciting. It wouldn't have been half as much fun if it were for a human persona at the other end. This "bot persona" is more lovable, in part due to our collective imagination and desire of being able to have an intelligent conversation with machines -- our R2-D2s and WALL*Es.
This has been a fantastic experiment in social psychology as well as a superb publicity approach. MarsPhoenix has about 20K followers making it one of the most popular Twitter users. Accolades to JPL researcher Veronica McGregor, for this terrific idea and posting interesting updates.
I think that there is a lot more to this story. I imagine that soon we will have more devices that we can talk to directly on Twitter and IM. One idea I had recently was to rig up our lab's coffee machine, Mr. Capresso, with a temperature sensor so that he can automatically inform us when fresh coffee is brewed in the lab.
And at the cost of sounding much like Eliza, I think that for a limited domain, we might even have the capabilities to build Natural Language Generation tools that could automatically post Tweets. I am aware that there are many bots on Twitter. But the tools I would like to see are the ones that can do more than just post a message (like a new video on qik, etc) -- true interaction would come only from conversations. A really wacky (but simple) example would be a poetic bot (yep! people have researched on that too! ;-) )that would send intelligible rhymes in response to @ messages. Might be quite hilarious to follow it!!
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