2011-12-05
post/13769935351
There should be URI’s for conversations on Twitter, and you should be able to favorite them.
Read from the bottom-up.
Fixed that for you, and you can even read it the right way up. Thanks, as always, to jwheare, whose side-projects I use more than I care to think about. (Just to restate the obvious: I love Exquisite Tweets. I should write about it properly.)
2011-08-03
NASA: Something is missing
- (Richard Danne quotes NASA’s Administrator, Dr. James Fletcher, and Deputy Administrator, Dr. George Low, having the following exchange)
- Fletcher: I’m simply not comfortable with those letters, something is missing.
- Low: Well, yes, the cross stroke is gone from the letter A.
- Fletcher: Yes, and that bothers me.
- Low: Why?
- Fletcher: (long pause) I just don’t feel we are getting our money’s worth!
2009-07-08
Archiving Twitter Via IRC
A couple of people have started posting the sort of thing I’d post here, but split into multiple Twitter posts. Unfortunately, given the absence of meaningful Twitter archiving and the way that the conversations (which can admittedly be useful, but are usually just distracting) drown them in the what you can see on Twitter, they’re quickly lost.
Even using URLs is tricky. For a series of posts, you end up having to open multiple links, and there’s no cohesive narrative. At least that gives you as a user a method of archiving them, but I though there’d be an easier way of doing so.
#2lmc have used a bot to fetch page titles for years. Pairing namer.pl, which only does that, with a from-Subversion copy of URI::Title, which fetches the full content of posts to Twitter, lets you quickly drop in post URLs and extract a conversation. Here’s John Siracusa, last week:
And here’s Fraser Spiers, this morning:
Obviously, it’s far from perfect, but at least it’s a single block of text that can be easily edited down to some meaningful sentences. (While the above is captured as text in my IRC logs. I thought it was a bit mean to turn what people might have considered ephemeral into archived HTML, so I’ve posted screnshots of my Terminal window containing the IRC client.)
I may try and do this more in future, or even build a more web-native method of doing so, but then I wonder if, despite the fact that you can’t copyright a post, people might get offended. It also fails (as so many Twitter apps do) when one participant is private. Ah well.



