2 Good Ways to Connect Twitter with your Gmail account

If you’re like me, you practically live in your GMail account. If you’re like me, you’re constantly posting to Twitter.

If you’re like me, you’ve been looking for a way to bring the two services together in some sort of halfway decent manner.

These are two of my favorite ways and I recommend them strongly.

1) Twitter Gadget for Gmail
tg4g

The Twitter Gadget for Gmail is not to be confused with TwitterGadget – they’re two similar services, but the former greatly outshines the later.

Once the widget is installed you’ll notice that it provides a little box to the left which you can use to quickly update your status. When you click on your name you’ll see a screen that looks like this.

Shot085 2009-07-21, 08_29_54

Containing everything that you would ever want in a Twitter client – including the ability to view replies/DMs and it includes the killer read/unread feature that I’ve been looking for in a web-based service. It automatically refreshes and everything is done in-line so you can leave this window open and just watch the tweets roll in.

The developers are currently working on some new features including a way to share tweets between Gmail users, but I’m highly surprised this isn’t one of the most popular clients out on the market currently.

2) TweetByMail
tweetbymail

TweetByMail is a Canadian startup launched after Twitter canceled their SMS service in Canada. It lets you send and recieve Twitter status updates from any email client. It looks like this in my email box. (I’ve created a GMail label to filter them out.)

TweetByMail

You can see that you can get a good birdseye view of what’s going on, and then you can use the tweets like you would any other piece of email, you can forward them, mark them as read, mark them as unread, move them to folders, add flags to them, etc.

The only downside of this way is you’re unable to filter down replies to you automatically, although you could use some gmail trickiness to star messages that contain @yourname in them, or you could use a service like Twitter2Mail.

TweetByMail supports all of the standard twitter commands, so you can update and reply to updates directly from your email box. In the few times I’ve needed support with the service they’ve been very prompt and very helpful. It’s a service I’m surprised isn’t more popular.

Hopefully I’ve pointed you into the right direction to getting a good Twitter solution, if you have any questions feel free to leave a comment or @livejamie me on Twitter. :)



  • Name
    Gotta say, the impostor Twitter Gadget for Gmail can't hold a candle to the real, original, TwitterGadget. The feature sets are light years apart. Any rational, knowledgeable person can easily see this when using the two, which I have extensively.

    TwitterGadget features include URL truncation, reverse short URL lookup, built in search, Tweet Shrink, Media upload, inline media preview, cool symbols insertion, username autocomplete for @ replies, and more. Most of which Twitter Gmail Gadget doesn't, oh, and it just works better too.
  • The TwitterGadget is probably better for people who are following a small amount of people as the size it is in GMail makes me a little claustrophobic, it's nice how the TG4G opens up it's own pane so you know what you're working with.

    TwitterGadget also doesn't allow me to favorite tweets in its GMail version (because of no avatars I guess?) which is a dealbreaker, ladies.

    Most of the features you mentioned that TG4G doesn't have, it has. But I can see how you'd be upset because they did completely steal your name - even if you both picked a generic name in the first place.

    I hope you and your company that make TwitterGadget well, I wish this to both projects! One option just might be better than the other.
  • Hey Jamie, thanks for the comments on TweetByMail. I appreciate that.

    Regarding your note about not being able to filter @replies, I was thinking what if I could put a * in the subject line if a message references your username. Then you could set up an appropriate mail filter and label.

    Just a thought... I could try it but it may end up causing a big slow-down in the sending script, as it would have to start searching every outgoing tweet. Worth a shot, at least.
  • Ooops! I forgot to mention option B. You can use the tracking feature and have all replies sent to a gmail sub-address (username+tbmreplies@gmail.com) which could then be filtered.
  • Hey Ryan,

    Thanks for responding - showing that your support to your product is superb. I think that I can set GMail's filters to filter anything with my name in it automatically, but if you have any ideas to make that easier without impacting your service I think that would be great.

    Your tracking idea is a great one.

    Thanks! :)
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