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I also agree with what you are saying about Twitter. When in consideration of SEO strategy, I find it more beneficial, at first, to have more followers than to follow. On the other hand, I post the link of all that follow me on a blog that will provide them with the exposure to out of network followers - it balances and I saw my twitter on google for search terms in about 24 hours. Plus, not all use Twitter in the same fashion. If I want business or political updates, then I do not want to follow someone that is posting when they take naps and feed their cat. So, not spam - just SEO - dislike of clutter, too. I prefer to communicate with Twitter friends on networks as well.
I think it's more important to be mindful of the content you're pushing out... and less important to focus on a narrowly-defined set of technologies. If software and hardware are any indication, standardization and cross-platform compatibility (or maybe 'aggregation' in netspeak) are the way things will continue to trend in the future.
Exclusive loyalty to your Twitter network or your FB network or your MySpace network or whatever is just a preference for a particular brand... the real meat of the issue is whether you're communicating interesting content in an authentic way with people who know and trust you.