Well, we’d have preferred to get this done sooner, but not long after GlimpseNYC, a little lady named Sandy came to town and we’ve been cleaning up from her ever since.
But better late than never, so if you’d like to see all the tweets from the Glimpse Conference last month, here’s your chance!
Internet Media Labs, the company behind SeeS.aw, and oneQube is providing the Glimpse Conference attendees with access to a web-based transcript containing all the great Tweets from the event tagged with #GlimpseNYC. It’s a great resource to connect with what was said and who said it!
To get started, click on this link to SeeS.aw/insights/glimpsenyc. This will take you to the log in screen. To log in with Twitter, just click on the “Connect with Twitter” button on the landing page, and authenticate your account. 
You will then be taken to a login box that says “enter access code”. Enter “glimpsenyc2012” (all one word, lower case) and hit submit…you are now in the report!
If you don’t have a Twitter account or would like to sign in via an alternative method, click on the “register to login” link in the lower left of the log-in box.
This will open up the registration form. Please enter your email address, password, and “glimpsenyc2012″ as your access code — you now are also in!
This is the landing page view…as you can see, there are 940 tweets in the transcript – a lot of data. The oneQube Insights platform will help you sort through it.
OneQube Insights has simple but powerful functionality that will allow you to sort Tweets by date, name, user name, keyword, phrase, or hashtag contained within a tweet. Or you can combine queries to create a multi-input filter that delivers exactly what you are looking for.
For example, if you want to see Tweets from Steve Sarner (@SteveSarner), start typing “steves” in the Twitter Username box. You’ll see 29 Tweets from Steve in the transcript.
User Tip: just scroll over any hyperlinked Twitter username to get a quick look at their bio and stats:
If you wanted to see just the Tweets from GlimpseNYC that contained the word “social”, type “social” in the ‘Search by Tweet’ box. You will see that there were 10 Tweets that contained this word.
At anytime if you want to see more records on the page, just enter in the number you want in the Records per Page box in the upper right.
To save a particular query as a ‘View’ that you can come back to again and again, simply enter a nickname for your query and hit save…it will now be saved in your view archive on the upper left.

To load a view, simply click the drop down and select. You can save an unlimited number of views.
You can also export any query, at any time, as a .csv file. Just lick on the ‘Export View” button, and then the ‘download file’ hyperlink’ when it is ready. If you want to leave specific view and go back to the default view, just click the orange “reset view” button next to update records per page.
The last and perhaps most powerful piece of functionality of oneQube Insights is the “Deep Drill”
you can do on each Twitter profile in the transcript. With the Deep Drill, oneQube indexes any meta-data that it can find by from searching the link in a Twitter bio (if available), as well as mapping a user’s Social Graph (who they talk to & is talks to them) and Interest Graph (what they talk about). For this report, we concentrated on the hashtags in their tweets. This quickly allows you to expand your network through Twitter personalities you already know or like.
“I like Steve, so I bet I would like the people he talks to also!”
To drill on anyone in the report, click on the black icon next to their hyperlinked Twitter handle.
This brings up a pop-over with three tabs: Profile, Trends, and Website Profile. The Profile (default) tab contains all the info from Steve’s Twitter bio, as well as his 20 most recent Tweets. Note: those Tweets are current, not the tweets from the conference.
Click on the Trends tab and you will see the drop downs below. Click on any one of those to see who Steve is Tweeting @, who is Tweeting @ him, and what hashtags are popping up in Steve’s Tweets.
Lastly, click on the Website Profile to get a deeper look into Steve’s online presence. There you will find all sorts of good stuff including different ways to get in touch with Steve, other social contact points, images and links.
That about does it.
Please use this report freely and share it with your network if you like, courtesy of Internet Media Labs. Robert Moore, Co-Founder of IML, will be happy to help you navigate the platform should you require additional assistance. You can connect with Robert via Twitter @MediaLabRat or email: RMoore@InternetMediaLabs.com . He will be happy to schedule a walk through for you via phone, skype, or chat.















Amazing software. it works great! Thanks for this post!