Following on from my quick tip last month about not missing replies, I’ve got another one: tracking who’s RT / retweeting / whatever phrase you use for this action.
Once again using the same somewhat unknown feature on http://icanhaz.com I created a quick URL to get those retweets.
Quick tip. If someone tweets, “@builtbydave ….” the tweet will show in my replies tab. If they “…. @builtbydave ….” it doesn’t — there’s a good chance I’ll miss it. Using a somewhat unknown feature on http://icanhaz.com I created a quick URL to get those missed tweets.
All this browser innovation (not just Chrome, but also Snowl & Ubiquity from Mozilla) are great, but how quickly can this really move.. after all we still have IE.
If we don’t see the innovation from IE, can we bridge it somehow to allow it to gain mass market? IE plugins?
Opera? Did WebKit gaining popularity take care of them.
Firefox? Between WebKit (Apple, Google, Nokia) and Microsoft I can’t help thinking maybe their market share is a niche?
Internet Explorer? doubt it, too small an aim for the Google
Microsoft? Now we’re talking, bring Gears (included in Chrome) into the mix (over all the supported platforms) and you have the framework of an assault on desktop applications, Microsoft’s core business.
Facebook? If we’re looking at a push from desktop world into a web application world the phrase ‘WebOS’ appears. Remember f8 acquisition Parakey?
Javascript engines? Chrome uses V8, while Mozilla has SpiderMonkey & Rhine in it’s toolkit. Both IE and Opera also have their own. What will it mean for Javascript?
From Gears, what about Adobe AIR, Prism, Fluid, what will it mean for these bridging technologies?
Google earlier this year filed a patent called Network Node Ad Targeting. Basically, it’s about finding the influencer in a social network & advertising with them, via (I assume) AdSense (… I’ll leave a Pistachio vs Google comment for another time!).
In February Google released their Social Graph API, and according to ReadWriteWeb the information they’re gathering is starting to surface. It’s extremely valuable information, just think of it in a context away from advertising, i.e. people search.
Over at Pistachio HQ we’re a big fan of Amazon Web Services, and we’ve been using SimpleDB since day 1. However, for one reason or another we’ve needed to export our data and it turns out there’s no tools that do that… until now!
It does exactly what we want it to.. get our data. If you need to export your data, check it out. It’s open source and hosted over on Google code:
Google Suggest is a nifty feature of Google. It shows you a list of searches and the number of results before you actually search.
Firefox has accessed this list for a while now but only today did I notice that the results also include results from Google calculator, which as my main calculator I find very useful.
Hope you do to.
Update: so this is old news. But I’d missed it, hopefully you didn’t.
Hopefully everyone reading this has had a chance to visit the Social Media Cafe in London, every Friday at the Coach and Horses, if not I highly recommend it.
Brighton branch? Josh Russell (my partner in many-a-crime) is organising the Brighton Social Media Cafe, 11am every Saturday upstairs at the Quadrant. Unfortunately doesn’t look like I’ll be able to make the first, but I recommend you do.
At dConstruct for the last few years I organized ‘pre-dConstruct pre-party Burgers’ (still time to signup for this years), for some it’s almost tradition now… I thought, “let’s do the same for Flash On The Beach“:
One of GBK’s finest burger’s with great web/RIA folks before a slow-burger-waddle to the pub for pre-FOTB fun, games, and chit-chat. For pubs, we’ll go round the corner to the Waggon & Horses / Mash Tun / Mrs Fitzherberts trio (which for those not in the know is between the official hotel & the venue).
If Technorati limit feed bodies to 140 characters don’t they already have a “decentralized” Twitter? And search. And advertising platform. And ping. And funding. And… identi.ca who?
Looking through the Techcrunch f8 notes Facebook seem to be touching on the big picture of a few things. I’d assume they get this. Should be an interesting year.
What are the consequences (positive, and negative) of having a public todo list? I’m sure I’m not the first person to wonder, anyway..
Something you wanted me to do? Just prefix your tweet “@builtbydave #todo” and it’ll appear in my public todo list & my feed reader. Here’s one I sent to Aral:
What’d the use be on something like this outside of todo’s, i.e. sending a link. Not to dissimilar to del.icio.us for:builtbydave tag… @builtbydave #link? I’m sure my subconscious has me thinking about this from Alfie’s blog post, @everyone: The command line is mainstream.
Via a Greasemonkey script we’ve added a search box to Twitter that will take you to their newly acquired search, yes.. their current interface doesn’t have a search through tweets function.
Here’s an experiment. Since Twitter acquired & integrated Summize ($15m Cash+Stock) they’ve had search. A better search then Twitter had previously. So, why not try it as your default search?
Run: perl -pi -e 's/%@.google.com\/%@\?q=%@&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8/search.twitter.com\/search\?no=%@,%@&q=%@/g' /Applications/Safari.app/Contents/MacOS/Safari(this should all be on one line within Terminal)
Last night at the £5 app eventRibot sponsored by providing beers. I took a photo on my iPhone as I really like these for a number of reasons by luckily Ribot put photos online(!) so I’ll use his. Apart from it being beer & it demonstrating their design process I was most taken by the change of value.
What once was a behavioral value (it got you drunk) was transformed through, and throughout their design efforts into a reflective value. This was obvious at the event by people’s interest in the ‘new iteration’ & even taking the covers off to take home as a souvenir.