I recently was invited to try my hand at Wooxie, and was pleasantly surprised by what I saw. Wooxie, a micro- and macro-blogging site created by Jeff Knize, is what other social media microblogging sites should've been from the start, integrating within it features that the popular micro-blogging site has decided to leave up to 3rd-party apps such as Twitpic, Twitlonger, TinyUrl, Tweetdeck and others.
Remember back in September when Twitter went down for awhile (the Twitterpocalypse,) and everyone began searching for alternatives? Although Wooxie does not have a great deal of users on board, it gained a significant following during that time. There is certainly nothing wrong with supporting the competition as well, in order to see if a rising wave "carries all ships," so to speak...
155 vice 140 characters - You'll be pleasantly suprised to find 15 more characters to say what is on your mind in Wooxie. How many times did you need just a few more keystrokes to make it all work, judiciously slaughtering your comment with the use of u, &, and vowel-less words?
Knize says that his team determined that around 155 characters is the "sweet spot" for microbloggers to say what they need.
Macro-blogging - for those times when you need more room to say it, Wooxie incorporates a macro-blogging feature allowing 240 - 1,440 characters for the comment. You no longer have to break up your tweet into many little ones, or log into 3rd party apps such as Twitlonger to make the story juicier. Just click on Wooxie's Go Macro button and you'll be given some extra space! Dude, if you still have problems with it, get a blog!
Did I mention a blog? That's right! Jeff and his team have now added a full-featured blog for each user. You're reading mine right now... Rather than trying to figure out yet another website to share even more information on a permanent basis, why not create your first blog on Wooxie? It's fun, easy, and you can share your post through Wooxie and other social media networks!
Interest Categories - Rather than guessing or relying on tweets and profile information to find new, interesting people to follow, you can identify yourself using interest categories.
In your profile settings you can include yourself in up to 15 interest categories (there are 35 offered, including Social Media, Animals and Pets, Music, Family, Food, Video Games, Health and Wellness.) Others can search by those categories and find you.
Searching for others from any of these categories is easy, sort of like a Lists feature, months before Twitter got it worked out. Rather than relying on how others have categorized you, Wooxie allows users to determine that for themselves. And whenever you are looking at someone's username, Wooxie will tell you whether he or she shares your interests based on having similar categories chosen.
To change which of the 15 allowed categories you belong to, simply visit the Settings tab and check or uncheck the boxes as desired. If the categories don't properly define you, then do so in your profile and through what you say. Recently, Wooxie has added a search feature as well, so that you can look up individuals based on name or keyword.
Built-in Photo Sharing and Albums - Wooxie not only allows you to upload images into your own integrated image library, you can even categorize the images into a simple personal or business album. No longer will you need to visit Twitpic, YFrog or Twitgoo to house (and share) those pics of your trip to Hawaii or new puppies.
You can put new pics in and share them immediately as part of the interface (looks a little like Brizzly as it shows the images inline,) or you can simply upload them into one of your albums without sharing, and share them when you are ready at a later date.
Twitter and Facebook update integration - You can share your "Woofs" with your other social media accounts by providing Wooxie access to them. As long as your Twitter login information matches your Wooxie information, you can tweet as you normally do on Twitter through the Wooxie interface, and even update your status on FaceBook simultaneously.
Wooxie now allows for usernames that include underscores (_) in them, so people with a username with an underscore in Twitter (like @_stevewoods) can now also use Wooxie to update Twitter and Facebook.
Private or Public "Woofing" - A bit on the shy side? You can protect your comments from the eyes of others, sharing only with those that you allow to follow you, or go fully public with the details of your life, by choosing what you prefer in the Settings tab.
Rewoofing - Similar to the RT feature found only in 3rd party Twitter applications such as TweetDeck, Wooxie integrates a Rewoof (RW) one-click feature.
Integrated URL-Shortener - No bit.ly, ow.ly, or tinyurl accounts or systems in order to obtain a shorter link for those incredibly long blog post URLs. Wooxie has a built-in URL shortener. Although the addition of http://url.wooxie.com in front of each shortened URL is a full 8 characters longer than the bit.ly shortening system, with the additional 15 characters you get in Wooxie, it's really not a loss...
Profiles and Backgrounds - As to be expected in social media accounts, you have the ability to customize with your own personal avatar, chosen color schemes, and canned or customized background images (700 kb max with jpg or gif support.)
Featuring Fans or Followers - you can feature either one of your "fans" who follow you, or one of the users you are following. These will show up on your main page, telling everyone who visits who you think are especially great or interesting. It's easy to add them and take them back off later.
Replies, Favorites and Private Messages - Wooxie has been careful in including all of the best features of Twitter, including the ability to see who has mentioned you, the ability to save comments as favorites to review later, and the ever-necessary private messaging feature, so you can talk without others reading.
Google Adsense - Create an AdSense account by following the instructions in Wooxie, and you can make money as others visit your blog posts and shared articles, and click on the advertisements there.
Why not try out Wooxie for yourself? Go ahead, create an account using the same login information as Twitter, and give it a whirl. Lend your voice for awhile and let's see if we can kick this party into gear.
As for me, I was able to obtain the username Steve. Very cool, if this thing takes off, I get to be the Steve.... Ha.