YourDublin

Connect with residents of Dublin, Ohio

I've started a Twitter page (handle AndyResnik), and now I'm trying to link YourDublin to it. I'm not sure yet if it worked.

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So far, it's not working. I'll have to get a ThisWeek Web producer to help me.

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Ahhh Andy, I can now very lovingly call you a 'Twit'!!! A few 'language' issues most get confused with....

..the 'cool' way to promote your twitter acct. is with an @ sign in front of it i.e.- @AndyResnik.

..if you like someone elses tweet from your feed box and want to share it with your twitter network you can repost the text with an RT (ReTweet) infront of it.

..The hash mark (#) before a word in a post allows you to tag that post for that word. However, in order to get tracked via a hash tag, you need to opt-in and follow http://twitter.com/hashtags. Once you’re following Hashtags, every time you make a post in Twitter and tag it with a hash mark like so: #iPhone, it will then show up as a real-time post on http://www.Hashtags.org


You know I'm there already, but if anyone else wants to 'Tweet' with me, I'm http://twitter.com/beonscene

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Wow, that's a lot to remember.

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One YourDublin post made it to my Twitter feed, and another did not. I can't even begin to guess how that happened.

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    Dublin history lesson

    Peter and Benjamin Sells came to the area around 1801 from Huntington County, Pa., to buy land. Old Dublin was first platted in 1810 by their brother, John. Surveyor John Shields named the town after his birthplace in Ireland. The town developed the usual assortment of mills, shops and churches, with settlers coexisting peacefully with Wyandot Indians, who camped on Indian Run. The town gained notoriety in the mid-19th century, when a surplus of taverns and rowdy Civil War veterans gave the village a tough reputation. Columbus' growth and the construction of I-270 made expansion inevitable. Dublin achieved city status in 1987.
    Source: Columbus Dispatch library research

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