Archive for the ‘rss’ tag
After yet another grumble at jt, I’ve finally broken and will give Twitter a try (my ID is andrewferrier). I’m still struggling to see where the benefit will come from, but he made the valid point that I can’t say for sure ’til I try it – so I’ve given in and will give it a go. To be fair, I’ve come across two bits of useful info. already, so early signs are promising.
My concerns are:
- It’ll suck time. I don’t think that can be avoided – it’s just a question of whether there’s enough benefit there to make it worthwhile.
- I haven’t yet found an interface that works for me. twitter.com is too much of a stream-of-consciousness, and not rich enough to show clear threads of discussion or filter stuff out. I’m avoiding desktop clients as a matter of habit these days. Integrating the RSS feed into my Google Reader stream will just overwhelm me. This could be a deal-breaker; I’m already wondering whether Twitter actually lends itself to a inbox, read-everything model or if I should chill and let stuff slip past unread (something that sends prickles down my spine).
- Twitter’s help pages suck. Still haven’t found the number to SMS updates to in the UK (OK, I haven’t tried that hard).
New Delicious – For Mobile Once Again
Used to be, I employed a cunning trick I found on the web to create a quick ‘n’ dirty homepage for my browser on my mobile – all the delicious bookmarks I’d tagged with mtag.
Then delicious went and released a new version and this trick broke.
After a bit of fiddling, I’ve found a reasonable alternative. feed.informer will take any RSS feed and turn it into fairly plain HTML. So take your RSS feed, which might look something like this:
http://feeds.delicious.com/v2/rss/andrewferrier/mtag?count=100
(the count increases the maximum number of items in the feed to 100)
Now plug it into feed.informer, and edit the options to make the result look how you want (hint: I modify the template, and set the Per-Item Template to <a href=”%URL%”>%TITLE%</a><br />, leaving the rest of the template blank – this prints one bookmark per line). You’ll also need to sign up and create a feed.informer account whilst you’re doing this (assuming you don’t already have one).
Once done, just view the ‘HTML’ version of the digest you created, and set that as your mobile homepage. Bingo.