Adam,
Happy Id to you and all on this list.
Secondly, With due respect to you, I want to point out that spammers
dont typically read or care about responses.
However such responses leave a bad taste and spoil impression in minds
of other mature and serious list subscribers.
Tell me: what would
2009/9/20 Nalin Savara nsn...@gmail.com:
Tell me: what would your response implying death to spammer achieve..
Which a 'thread locked and sender blocked ' response would not achieve
It's amusing.
Granted, it's neither mature nor serious to snicker behind your hand
at a snide remark, but it's
Thanks for your mail Caliban.
Cool.. I see your point..
Though I choose to differ and in my case I try to keep public mail
exchanges mostly professional..
Anyways. . Take care buddy.. And have fun !!!
Thanks and Regards,
Nalin
On 9/21/09, Caliban Darklock cdarkl...@gmail.com wrote:
Ryan: Is this still scheduled for today or tomorrow ?
Thanks
Martin Dufort
www.wherecloud.com
On Sep 11, 3:00 pm, Ryan Sarver rsar...@twitter.com wrote:
Hwee-Boon,
That is definitely part of the plan and hence why we are aiming for
that Monday / Tuesday. We know what a strain it can be to
Hi I'd like to know if it's possible to get more than 100 searches per
request with the search API. I'm using the API with Flash, AS3. I
wanna do some data visualization and the limit is not helping me at
all.
I've thought about doing different queries, one for each 100 and up to
the 1500 limit.
The Search API rate limiting is implemented differently then the rate
limiting for the REST API. For example the Search API is IP based and has no
concept of user authentication, and the actual limit is not published.
You can read more in the Search API section on:
100 searches per request or 100 results per search?
-Original Message-
From: twitter-development-talk@googlegroups.com
[mailto:twitter-development-t...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of hr
Sent: Monday, September 21, 2009 8:25 AM
To: Twitter Development Talk
Subject: [twitter-dev] Twitter
To give everyone another update, we are still on track to trigger
Twitpocalypse II tomorrow (Tuesday 9/22) at 11:30am PST. We are trying
to do it as early in the day as we can on our side to accommodate
developers in other timezones.
For those of you unaware of what the Twitpocalypse is
Thanks for the reply. I already have found how to do that. In fact I
used your code to do that :)
On Sep 21, 12:11 pm, Abraham Williams 4bra...@gmail.com wrote:
An access token can be used by your application to authenticate and act as
that use for any of the REST API. Using your consumer
With all your developer partners at TC140 tomorrow???
On Sep 21, 2009, at 11:36 AM, Ryan Sarver rsar...@twitter.com wrote:
To give everyone another update, we are still on track to trigger
Twitpocalypse II tomorrow (Tuesday 9/22) at 11:30am PST. We are trying
to do it as early in the day
Why wouldn't said developer partners have updated their code 2 weeks ago
when this was announced?
On Mon, Sep 21, 2009 at 14:22, Michael Steuer mste...@gmail.com wrote:
With all your developer partners at TC140 tomorrow???
On Sep 21, 2009, at 11:36 AM, Ryan Sarver rsar...@twitter.com
On Mon, Sep 21, 2009 at 1:42 PM, JDG ghil...@gmail.com wrote:
Why wouldn't said developer partners have updated their code 2 weeks ago
when this was announced?
Three reasons.
A. Irresponsibility. Paying no attention to anything, they have no
clue this is happening and indeed will not even
Agreed, but then they're probably aware of the situation and have made plans
to mitigate if they're going to be attending TC140.
On Mon, Sep 21, 2009 at 14:52, Caliban Darklock cdarkl...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Sep 21, 2009 at 1:42 PM, JDG ghil...@gmail.com wrote:
Why wouldn't said
All things being prefect, it would good if the development staffs of
many companies were not out at TC140 when this happened.
Zac Bowling
On Mon, Sep 21, 2009 at 1:55 PM, JDG ghil...@gmail.com wrote:
Agreed, but then they're probably aware of the situation and have made plans
to mitigate if
If the original retweet is deleted its retweets will also disappear.
On Sun, Sep 20, 2009 at 3:56 PM, Dewald Pretorius dpr...@gmail.com wrote:
With the new retweeting, what happens with retweets if the original
tweet is deleted, or the author's account is closed or suspended?
Do all the
If the original retweet is deleted its retweets will also disappear.
I don't know if I like that. Yes, it might save the original tweeter some
embarrassment, but sometimes it's useful to make a tweet survive. Imagine a
political gaffe that could be withdrawn instantly and everything that
Thanks. Am I correctly understanding that the near parameter uses the
location of the users profile and will not use the new geolocation api
lat/long data?
On Sep 20, 9:37 pm, John Kalucki jkalu...@gmail.com wrote:
It is very unlikely that we would offer a publicly available method on
the
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