Tag Archives: twitter

Retweeting Locations

If you read this blog or follow me on twitter, you might know that a few weeks ago I wrote a script that queries the twitter search API for instances of the words Barnet, Hackney and Medway and retweets the original message.

I have had mixed feelings about these bots since setting them up, but it has been interesting watching them grow organically.  I have never actively promoted any of these twitter accounts and currently their follower count is:

medway_tweet – 99

hackney_tweet – 172

barnet_tweet – 23

Last week I had, what I described as a “fruity” comment left on my blog about these bots.  So I asked whether people thought I should kill these bots.  The responses that came back both on my blog and over twitter were all in favour of keeping these bots. So I decided to keep them running.

Given the number of followers on each account, clearly people see the value in using twitter as a local conversation tool.  These accounts were not setup as a spam mechanism, but a way of building a local community over twitter and promoting local conversation.

This morning I have had a heated exchange over twitter about these bots again.  I can appreciate why they might annoy some people and I  have always been sensitive to this.  Also, the last thing I want to do is to get up in the morning and have to deal with this type of conversation.  It’s not why I get up.

So for that reason, I am stopping @medway_tweet, @hackney_tweet and @barnet_tweet for the moment.  As these bots also use backstage.bbc.co.uk API for local news, I will figure a way of incorporating other news sourses.  Perhaps the bots should only retweet messages from followers – if you follow, you don’t mind being retweeted?

I am interested to hear peoples opinions on this and possible ideas to avoid annoying people.

Twitter and PBWiki Integration

I decided to have a go at writing a script to integrate twitter with PBWiki.  The main reason for this is because the Tuttle Club uses PBWiki to organise their events and attendees add their name to the list on the wiki if they are attending.

After seeing Lloyd Davis’s blog post on the idea, I thought I should whip something together as I already have scripts that can monitor key words.  So this was just adding PBWiki integration.

This script means you can add your name to the list of attendees on PBWiki just by typing “#tuttlebot going” anywhere within a tweet.  The script simply scans the twitter search api for the #tuttlebot hashtag and if the tweet mentions “going”, the twitter name and tweet is added to the PBWiki page.

You can see this in action on a test page that I have created on PWBWiki.  Looking forward to hearing feedback on this and making modifications and adding more commands.

The Twitter Geo Test

I have decided to build on the @medway_tweet engine and do the same for @barnet_tweet and @hackney_tweet. I am looking forward to seeing how these communities pan out. Using twitter as a local communication tool is realistic now there are so many users accross the board.

Since launching @medway_tweet it has been interesting watching the community build and seeing the conversation local to the area.  The same can now be said for Hackney and Barnet.

Potentially I’ll be rolling this out over about 30 areas as a trial and then around 400 areas if things work as intended.  I’m hoping these retweet bots have a positive impact on the local communtities that they are intended for. We’ll see…..

Namesakes and Doppelgangers

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Since writing the @medway_tweet application, I have been thinking about the idea of opening up to include more Medway town names in the twitter search API query.  I had a conversation with Carl Jeffrey (aka @fellowcreative) about the app and he pointed out that maybe I should think about ignoring medway tweets from US twitter users, especially as there is a Rochester and Medway in the USA and this will help to filter out unrelevant and unlocal data.

But the thing with this is, it might also filter out some very relevant data.  Especially if someone living in the USA is actually referring to the Medway in Kent, UK.  It’s not a bomb proof factor.  So a concession will need to be made somewhere along the lines, whether it is a data integrity issue, false negatives or moderation.

This got me thinking.  Actually it could be a positive thing.  Meaning @medway_tweet could become an online twinning vehicle, bridging the gap for those living in Medway anywhere in the World.  Helping to build communities within a community and to share experiences.

So we’ll see how this goes and I am really looking forward to see how this app grows and evolves over time.  There is also scope to include more data inputs – suggestions welcome.

In the mean time, I am trying to figure out the best way to roll this out for other areas.

Photo courtesy of brianbutko under a Creative Commons License

Every Twitter App Deserves a Blog Post

Today I developed and released a new twitter app @medway_tweet.

If you have absolutely no idea what I am talking about, move along now.  Otherwise, stay tuned for a quick description of the new app I have developed.

Now to begin with, I do not claim that this is a unique idea.  I have been following @ubuntutweets for ages.  But this application is slightly different.   @medway_tweet aims to connect local people in the Medway area using an online community brought together by a dispersed and cached network. Twitter.

There is no website, everything is sent to @medway_tweet that checks the twitter search api for the phrase “medway” and simply retweets it.  OK, there is more to it than that in the code, but that is the simplicity of the app.  By retweeting whenever medway is mentioned in a tweet, the re-tweet encourages the follow, which encourages more tweeting which builds the community.

So if you are in the Medway area, follow @medway_tweet on twitter.  Otherwise, stay tuned for for more locations.

[Update 21 March 2009] I have added support for news and sport mentioning the word Medway courtesy of the backstage.bbc.co.uk API. Pleased to be making used of this excellent API and hope this feed adds context to the local focus.


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The Cloud Doesn’t Change Anything

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Nik Butler (aka @loudmouthman) posted the above question on twitter yesterday and it provoked a lively debate about the nature of the Cloud and the implications for us all in terms of our data security.  For me, the Cloud doesn’t change a great deal.  My email has always been in cloud.  I did run an Exchange Server until a couple of months ago, but this was fed by a mailserver in the cloud anyway.  So learning how to cope with a Cloud service was something that I dealt with from pretty much the word go.

But it does prompt a serious question.  Especially after twitpic has been down for the whole day today.  I use twitpic most days, and link to it everywhere and I have been building up a pretty good collection of the plates of food that I cook.  Today I have been getting messages from people saying they couldn’t see my twitpics.

Coincidentally, yesterday I started posting  my phone photos into friendfeed, and phreadz along with twitpic in one email.  So today I could use my friend feed image url.

Posting phone photos with a Nokia N95 is so easy to do using gmail that it just has to be done.  However, it was only today when twitpic went down that I realised this was actually a good move.  There are obvious benefits to cross posting in multiple locations, spreading readership being a major one.  Especially in this case, as friendfeed is still not the place where everyone hangs out and Phreadz is still invitation only, although my Phreadz channel is now public.  So I do not pollute the same audience in any location, meaning I am spreading my readership by posting in all those locations.  At least I hope.

But what this also does, is backup your images in multiple locations.  It makes sure you have a full stream of all your images in a redundant manner, guarding against a service going pop, whether financial or from some kind of attack or incident.

If twitpic never comes back up from this, and currently it is still not backup, I have lost all of my food photos, and most of the images that I have taken on a daily basis and posted from my phone or laptop since the service began.  OK, I am over reacting here and luckily I also have them backed up on a few drives in my home.  So it is not the end of the world.

Twitpic will come back up and be working again and will hopefully be far stronger for it.  For the whole time I have been using twitpic, it has been an awesome service and I’ve never noticed it to be down before.  But this does highlight the need for redundancy, in multiple locations.  Have a backup in the Cloud.  In fact, have multiple Cloud backups in multiple locations.  If they are free services, like twitpic, even better!

My original answers to Nick’s tweet from last night would still be the same:

@loudmouthman surely that’s the benefit of the cloud? live data in one location, backup data in another physical location.

and

@loudmouthman no one said that putting data in the cloud means you have to trust your provider to run backups. nothing changes there surely?

So there we have it.  The cloud is a great place.  Excellent free services.  Don’t assume anyone just backs up your data.  And if you can’t access that service, or it goes down, will you miss that data? Backing up data still has to be done. We just have more options.