I was a bit amazed at an article I read just yesterday in which it was proven that out of all the people who tweet about 56 % do it on a personal level. That is, more than half of the total number of Twitter users are tweeting about what they had for lunch, who they met at the video rental store and so on.
I would have thought that a very sizable amount of Twitterers were professional ones indeed, but I guess these statistics and numbers don’t lie. Still, they mean that a site such as You Tell You has a ready audience that will go fervently for it.
I say so because this new service will let anybody come up with “the magazine of his life” by uploading pictures and creating photo stories. These can then be shared with whomever they like by way of not only Twitter but also Facebook. Of course, sharing the resulting media through any blog is also a possibility .
The ultimate aim of the site is to let us all come up with a magazine that is updated by the minute, and that can be read by just anybody. It is always possible to browse the different pages of the featured magazines by author, too, so that if you want to figure out whether your friends have caught up on this new social practice you will be capable of doing it on the spot.
YouTellYou.com In Their Own Words
“YouTellYou is the new way to share your photo stories.”
Why YouTellYou.com It Might Be A Killer
People who like to share everything will be right in their element.
Some Questions About YouTellYou.com
Will it catch on? Will people actively take to something like it?
Updates
A very interesting feature has just been added to YouTellYou – mobile phones are now supported. From this point on, you can publish stories while you are on the go, and (if your phone allows it) you can even add an audio track and comment your story. You are not required to signup first, and all you have to do is create an email, attach the images and send the message to [email protected]. Approximately ten minutes after having received your email your story will be featured.
The photos will be arranged automatically, one per section, in the original order that you had attached them. And if you recorded a voice message and attached it to the email, a Quicktime player will be automatically placed inside the summary for your readers to listen to what you have to say. 





