TechLifeWeb

Exploring the digital life

Easy Way to Find Twitter Status or Favorites RSS Feed

Recently Twitter has hidden their RSS feeds. You used to be able to find them right on a user’s page. They are still there and I have read the most convoluted ways to find them. It is REALLY easy.

Want yours or someone else’s statuses? Here is the feed, just replace the X’s with the user twitter name:

  • http://twitter.com/statuses/user_timeline/XXXXXXXXXX.rss

Want a feed of favorites?

  • http://twitter.com/favorites/XXXXXXXXXX.rss

That’s it.  Just put the feed in your favorite feed reader and you are done.

If you want your Facebook RSS, read this.

UPDATE: 04DEC2012 – Twitter broke every thing recently. Thankfully there is a new method. Similar to the above, just use these links instead:

Timeline:

https://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/user_timeline.rss?screen_name=XXXXXXXXXX

Favorites:

https://api.twitter.com/1/favorites.rss?screen_name=XXXXXXXXXX

Live pictures and videos coming in about Japan

If you don’t have Twitter or don’t have friends that get it, point them here. This is a feed of live updates coming in with pictures and videos from about Japan.


Five Steps to Failing on Twitter

For a long time I have had my 5 Point Twitter Fail plan as the background on my Twitter profile. I used to have it in my bio but I decided to put it there because I wanted to be sure it was visible even if you just linked to one of my tweets.

Today I decided to print them here because it is time more people paid attention to them.

5-Point Twitter Fail Plan

1. Be all about you

2. Auto-post crap

3. Talk only about SEO, social media, etc.

4. Be non-human

5. Care less

Yes, number 5 is 2 words.

Twitter – It’s All About The Gestures

Are you an ‘insider’ in your industry? Go to all the smart cocktail parties? Get all the breaking news before it breaks? No? You should be.

What if I told you you could find out what smart leaders in your industry are reading about and thinking right now? What has their attention or what they have marked as important. Wouldn’t that be cool?

That, dear reader, is why I am on Twitter. Granted, as a technologist it is easier as the thought leaders are early adopters and using Twitter to its fullest. If you are in other industries then you may not have others that have truly grasped the power of Twitter. You have an opportunity, in those cases, to be the leader and help the others find the way.

You see, the more you are on Twitter the more you realize that it is all about the gestures. People find something interesting that they want others to see and they retweet it. Showing you, that is, gesturing to you, that they have paid attention to that topic and are assigning value to it.

An often overlooked Twitter feature are Favorites. The gestures here are very interesting. New favorites don’t show up in your normal twitter stream but if you go to the page of someone you follow you can look at them. People use these for all kinds of things. Sometimes they are kind of ego centric, marking their own tweets that have been retweeted. More often they are used as a kind of book mark. These are the really useful ones. These say ‘this tweet is important. I may want to return to this topic in the future.’  This really gives you a kind of insider peek into what is going on. Follow them long enough and you’ll start to really feel like an insider. Trends start to become clear. Sometimes these indicate ‘what’s next’ and other times they indicate what your fiend is into. The added benefit to following retweets and favorites is that you find new people as often these tweets are from people you don’t yet follow.

Next time I’ll show you the tools I have cobbled together to keep up to date with people who share great information.

Keep sharing.

Twitter to iCal

I was thinking last night that it might be interesting to take your Tweets and put them on a calendar. Kind of a life stream with calendar integration. I do crazy stuff like this because it helps me learn.

I figured since Twitter outputs to RSS I could take that and morph it into an iCal feed. As it turns out, this isn’t that hard with Yahoo! Pipes. However, it isn’t really doesn’t work all that well. The problem is that Yahoo Pipes only polls the RSS every 30 minutes or so. So if you tweet a lot things will get missed. Also, it will only hold the last 20 tweets at the time of polling. And then there is the calendar the polls iCal. I have no idea how often that happens.

So, this is just a proof of concept kind of thing. I thought since I got this bit figured out I’d release it and see if anyone else comes up with something better.

Here is how it works:

  • Go to: http://pipes.yahoo.com/techlifeweb/twitterical
  • Enter your twitter name (public accounts only, sorry) in the box provided imageand click Run Pipe
  • When the results com back, click More options and right click on Get as iCal then click “Copy Link Location” in your browser.

You now have the link to the iCal version of your Tweet. How you set this up in your calendar varies on calendar application.  Here, we’ll use Google calendar.

  • Open your Google Calendar
  • In the lower left click ‘add’ 
  • and then ‘Add by URL’
  • When the dialog box pops up, past in the iCal URL you copied in the steps above and click Add Calendar.

It will take a few seconds to a minute and they you will see your last 20 tweets in your calendar. You can change the colors if you want.

image 

So, developers out there, if you do something cool with this, please let me know.

How to Filter Your Twitter Feed

One cool thing about Twitter is that it automatically creates an RSS feed of your tweets. Sometimes these can be useful to put in other places that take RSS like FriendFeed or elsewhere. However, this can be a bit ‘noisy’ especially to none Twitter users who aren’t used to self-filtering.

One of the conventions that Twitter users have adopted is the notion of hashtags. Hashtags are words with the “#” symbol in front of them. Fore example, at a conference such as Bar Camp San Diego people might put #barcampsd in their twitter post. Sometimes people get a bit carried away with them but that is a topic for another time.

These two things, RSS from Twitter and the uniqueness of hashtags, let me create this great Yahoo! Pipe. With it, you can generate an RSS feed of only your tweets containing a certain hashtag. You can then use that feed in your other applications.

Have a look at my new Yahoo Pipe. It will give you and example of how to use it.

http://pipes.yahoo.com/techlifeweb/filteredtwitter

Simply enter the hashtag you want to filter on and your twitter name and then click Run Pipe. After the pipe runs you can click on the Get as RSS button to get your new filtered Twitter Feed.

RSS is not dead. It is the glue that holds the web together.

How I Find People to Follow on Twitter

There are so many articles around about how to find people to follow on Twitter. It is never clear to me why people are searching for some kind of instant friends list. You didn’t show up at school and get a Xeroxed list of people titled “Your New Friends.” It is the same on Twitter. There really is only one good way and it is mind numbingly easy. Go into your Twitter notifications settings andreplies check it from the default (Show me @ from the people I am following) to Show me all @ replies. Save. Done.

I hear you scratching your head. How could this help? Because you will start to see people you follow talking to other people. Granted, until you follow that other person you will only see one side of the conversation but things start to look interesting and you’ll click through to find out more about that new person and then start following and being part of the conversation. Then those new people follow a slightly different circle of friends and you see them talking and add another. And so on and so on. Get it? It is all about finding people naturally.

One simple change. No need to learn anything new. Start following people you are actually interested in following. Make it your own micro community.

Twitter Replies Summary

  • A reply in Twitter is any Tweet that you start with @username.
    You can reply to anyone even if they don’t follow you.
  • Anytime you create a Reply in the proper way (see #1), the reply will always show up in the Replies tab of the person you are replying to.
  • This is true if the person follows you or not and regardless of their reply settings.
  • Putting @usernamein other places in your Tweet is common courtesy when you are referring to someone else on Twitter but is NOT considered a reply in any way.

Tips on reply settings

  • To keep your recent time line clutter free, set your reply settings to “no @ replies”. Replies to you will always show up in your Replies tab.
  • To keep up with conversations with mutual friends, set your reply settings to “@ replies only to those I am following” (default setting)
  • To follow all conversations and have more potential to find more Twitter friends, set your reply settings to “all @ replies.” (This is the setting I recommend in this post)

Twimailer: Quite possibly THE killer app for Twitter

One of the things I hate about twitter is the lame email you get from Twitter when someone starts following you. This is where Twimailer comes in. Go to Twimailer.com, enter your email address and get a special email address for twitter to send all your follower notifications through. Twimailer then pulls lots more info about that user then Twitter gave you and sends it along to you. Helps you make better decisions on who to follow.

Below is a video to explain it in more detail:

UPDATE 05MAR09: Some people have worried about the security aspect of Twimailer and changing your email address in Twitter. @chrismessina posted a nice how to on using Gmail (you could use other email clients) to use Twimailer more securely and without making any modifications to Twitter. Nice!


Twimailer demo from jon on Vimeo.

How to Build An Information Monitor

Many people use various social services to stay in touch and to keep up with current events. One of my current favorites is Twitter. Over a year ago, Twitter turned off a service, called Track, that let you track topics. Track let you ‘follow’ a topic whether it was in your twitter stream of followers or not.

In the wake of Track, a developer created a service called TwitterSpy which let you use Google Talk to perform similar functions to that of Twitter’s Track. I’ve written about this before in my how to on setting up TwitterSpy and Google Talk.

While all this was going on, another social network called FriendFeed has joined the scene. I created an account not long after FriendFeed was brought on line and hooked it up so my tweets went from Twitter to FriendFeed but that was pretty much the end of it.

In recent weeks, limits put on the Twitter API and other discussions online have caused me to take another look a FriendFeed. I have to say, the people behind FriendFeed have done an amazing job and have created something truly unique. You just have to spend a bit of time exploring it and figure out how the pieces fit together.

In this article I am going to show you how I have used FriendFeed as the ‘glue’ to build a system to track a couple topics I am interested in, stay current with breaking news and events and also keep up with friends. While no programming is required, there are some necessary details to work through. Once this up front work is done, then adding, deleting or changing things is easy.

The main thing you will need is a FriendFeed account. It is good if you have Twitter too but it is unnecessary if all you want to do is track topics at Twitter. Actually, you don’t have to track Twitter, it is just my example. More on that later.FreindFeed Lists

Once you set up your FriendFeed account you will see lists on the left-hand column. Click ‘new list’ and call it Track (you can call it what ever you like but we’ll use Track for this tutorial).

You don’t need to add any Friends yet unless you are already following some friends on FriendFeed that you know you will want to track. Either way, you can add or remove friends later.

Now, here is were the powerful magic starts to happen. Lets say you want to track a topic people are talking about on Twitter. You could just go to Twitter Search but I have created a custom Yahoo Pipe for this purpose instead. I’ll explain why in a minute.

Go to http://pipes.yahoo.com/techlifeweb/twittersearchfeedbuilder

In this example we’ll track tweets containing the words Microsoft and Silverlight:

Instructions are at the top to help you build searches with AND OR operators. You can exclude tweets from yourself by adding your Twitter name in the second field. Click Run pipe, then click Get as RSS.

pipes1

Copy the RSS URL from your browser window. You will need this in a minute.

Ok so why the Pipe? After all, Twitter Search provides its own RSS feeds. The rub is that when you look closely at the feed generated by Twitter Search, you will see it doesn’t show you who tweeted. Here is an example of the same results as above:

search1

My Pipe figures out who tweeted and puts their twitter name at the start of the tweet. This way you can know who to respond to if you want.

Now for the next piece of magic, creating an Imaginary Friend. A cute quirky name but part of the brilliance of FriendFeed.

Go back to FriendFeed and, at the top Imagine1right of the screen, click Friends. Then click the Imaginary tab. Now click the Create Imaginary Friend button. Call it anything you like but I recommend having the name relate to what you are tracking. For this instance I would call it Silverlight_Tracker.

Now you will see your new ‘friend’. If you are creative you could create an icon for it instead of the smiley but that really isn’t necessary. Under Miscellaneous, click Custom RSS/Atom.

In the new box, paste in the RSS URL from the Yahoo pipe above.

Imagine2

Next check Display entries as messages (no link).

Click Import Custom RSS/Atom.

This will then pull in the latest results from the Pipe search.

Before you leave this screen, where it says Friend Lists under your imaginary friend’s name,  click add/edit. This will bringImagine3 up a list of all your lists. By default, your friend is in your Home feed list. You can uncheck that if you want, that is up to you. But do be sure to check the box next to Track. This lets all your friend’s posts show up in your new tracking system.

When we check the Track list we will see everything we are tracking so far. In our case now, just the Silverlight_Tracker shows up as in this screen shot:

Imagine4 

You can see that because we named it well, it gives us an idea of the subject matter of the tweet (more relevant when you add more things to track). And, because we used my Pipe, you can see who posted the tweet. Also, don’t forget, this is a search and returns all results whether you follow these people on Twitter or not.

You can use the above method for any RSS/Atom feed you may want to track. Create an imaginary friend for each one. If you are on Twitter, I recommend using the Pipe to create a track feed of your own user name. This way you don’t miss any tweets with your twitter name in the tweet. Another handy feed to track is my Ego Feed.

The Friends you track don’t have to be Imaginary.  You can track other people or services on FriendFeed itself. One of my favorites is BreakingNewsOn. Go to Friends in the upper right of FriendFeed, click the Find + Invite tab and search for BreakingNewsOn. When the results come back, subscribe to this friend then be sure to add it to the Track list.

Further, you can track someone on another service who isn’t on FriendFeed but that FriendFeed can connect directly to. This makes the service more than just an RSS reader. For example, lets say a photography buddy of yours isn’t on FriendFeed but does post her pictures on Flickr and you want to track when she puts up new photos. Follow the steps to create an imaginary friend then choose the Flickr service and enter their Flickr user name. Add this imaginary friend to the Track list and you are now tracking them.

If you want to stop tracking someone (or some topic) you can simply remove your friend from the Track list. You can also unsubscribe friends or delete imaginary ones. Its up to you and really depends on if you just want to stop tracking temporarily or more permanently.

Once you start experimenting with this method of track you will see how powerful it is. Give it a try. If you are using this in a unique way I’d love to hear about it.

But wait, there’s more! Next time, I will show you how to take this system to the next level.

BIL Link Monitor

I recently posted my TED Link Monitor. There is another conference of great minds going on this weekend too, BIL ( Benevolence. Inspiration. Luminary.) So I have built a similar link monitor for capturing Tweets with links. I won’t go into all the details. Basically the same with different search criteria as the TED link. You can get the RSS feed here:

http://pipes.yahoo.com/pipes/pipe.run?_id=f7d63b9cebcee86aa465b277002d3248&_render=rss

or use this button for Google Reader