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Twitter CEO Dick Costolo, fresh from a day of smartphone Twitter app
releases, said Tuesday night that his company saw Apple as a “mentor” to
Twitter.
“Apple is in many ways a mentor company for us,” Costolo told PBS
interviewer Charlie Rose. He said the companies had “a great
relationship.” Facebook, by contrast, got this chilly description:
“We’re very different companies.”
Facebook was pursuing symmetric networks, Costolo said, but Twitter
saw the world as asymmetric. They were fundamentally opposed, and
competed for ad dollars.
He also spoke of Twitter needing to have control over its own user experience. This was on the day that Twitter unified its experience across iPhone, iPad and the website.
“We’ll see how it evolves,” was Costolo’s judgment of Android. (He
also said Twitter saw itself primarily as a mobile company — taken
together, an implicit endorsement of the iOS platform.)
This year has seen Twitter abruptly shut off API access to an
increasing number of companies. It has also seen Twitter deeply
integrate into Apple’s Mountain Lion and iOS6 systems — ahead of
Facebook integration.
The interview gave us a lot of context on how Twitter sees itself,
and what developers who depend on the company can expect. Costolo
clearly stated he wanted a large ecosystem (just as Apple has), but
hinted at one that was very strictly and centrally controlled (much like
Apple’s).
What does this mean for the future of Twitter? Will Apple become ever
more integrated, and vice-versa? Give us your predictions in the
comments.
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