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Discoblog
« NCBI ROFL: Hula Hooping: Part I
Move Over, Google: The All-Knowing Search Engine Is Coming Soon »

Your Plants Have More Twitter Followers Than You—Literally

plant1.jpgOk, for anyone not on Twitter, it’s time to reevaluate: These days, even plants are doing it. And successfully, too—Pothos has 2,300 followers, and when it tweets, it almost always gets what it wants.

Granted, all it wants is water, but when plant owners are forgetful or just don’t have a green thumb, their green friends often go thirsty. The solution? Botanicalls, a device that sends wireless signals to Twitter. It’s made of soil moisture sensors that transmit information (too much moisture? too little?) through a circuit board to a microcontroller, just like a mini-computer.

The software has settings that allow you to program specifically for the type of plant and the unique qualities of the soil, and the language sent to Twitter can be customized—so the message can vary in tone from the polite “please” to the urgent “I’m desperately thirsty”—or, as Mr. Ikea Plant will tweet, “I’m wicked thirsty.”

Co-creator Kate Hartman now feels guilty when she doesn’t water her plants because everybody will know. It’s like the Little Shop of Horrors has gone high-tech. Not to mention more polite: The plant also sends “thank you” tweets once it’s been fed.

Related Content:
Discoblog: Twitter to Replace World History in England Schools
Cosmic Variance: Karl Rove is Following Me on Twitter

Image: Flickr / jazzmasterson

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March 26th, 2009 11:35 AM Tags: computers, plants, Twitter
by Rachel Cernansky in Technology Attacks! | 7 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

  • http://www.staple-austin.org Chris

    i’ve heard of people talking to their plants, but now they talk back?!? mercy!

  • http://www.1psheet.com/?p=6722 One Penny Sheet » Twittering Plant Knows How To Get What It Wants

    [...] followers on Twitter than I do (even though I am at least as personable) — and all it does is tweet about how thirsty it is: Ok, for anyone not on Twitter, it’s time to reevaluate: These days, even plants are doing [...]

  • http://www.woodka.com/2009/04/08/on-twitter-no-one-knows-youre-a-plant/ Changing Places » Blog Archive » On Twitter, no one knows you’re a plant

    [...] via Your Plants Have More Twitter Followers Than You—Literally | Discoblog | Discover Magazine. [...]

  • http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/discoblog/2009/06/23/talking-to-plants-may-make-them-grow%e2%80%a6particularly-if-you%e2%80%99re-female/ Talking to Plants May Make Them Grow…Particularly If You’re Female | Discoblog | Discover Magazine

    [...] Related Content: DISCOVER: Psychedelic Space Plants DISCOVER: The Plants That Eat Animals Discoblog: Plants Twitter When Thirsty [...]

  • http://revtwt.wordpress.com rvtwt

    It looks to me like you

  • addicted to bad

    So its the soil thats tweeting, not the plant.

  • http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/discoblog/2009/10/15/like-humans-plants-fare-better-when-theyre-among-family/ Like Humans, Plants Fare Better When They’re Among “Family” | Discoblog | Discover Magazine

    [...] Related Content: DISCOVER: Plant Migration Tied to Climate Change Discoblog: Your Plant Might Have More Twitter Followers Than You [...]





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      Discoblog is DISCOVER's compendium of quirky, funny, and surprising science news from the edge of the known universe. It's written by Veronique Greenwood and Valerie Ross. Email tips and suggestions to vgreenwood [at] discovermagazine [dot] com.

      Discoblog also includes the daily feature NCBI ROFL, in which two prone-to-distraction grad students post real scientific articles with funny subjects. Email your tips to ncbirofl [at] gmail.com. Follow the ROFL feed here.

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