Tim, have them open issues here
http://help.twitter.com/requests/new
That way we can track volume and get a better handle on the issue. It
seems fairly rare at this point, but that doesn't mean it's not a big
deal for those affected.
---Mark
http://twitter.com/mccv
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at
This my query string
"https://twitter.com/oauth/request_token?oauth_signature=dIjtVqiRK
%2BnWo5UYRSSs6WWwKII
%3D&oauth_callback=oob&oauth_consumer_key=gUutCG9HjEOT0N8IxvW9w&oauth_nonce=hO3CY2tN7OblsYdp0sOoThPRGEMypcWdM1PM&oauth_signature_method=HMAC-
SHA1&oauth_timestamp=1262716897&oauth_version=
I have a GreaseMonkey script ( http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/64286
) which displays the "Follows in Common" and the "Follow Rank" for a
given users profile page using the Friends and Follows api requests.
I've implement cursor style json request to the api, but have several
concerns around t
Mark,
I've told users a week or so ago via @favstar that you're fixing this - I
thought you'd be resolving the issue for everyone. Can I give people some
advice on how to report it if it's happening to them? What's the way you'd
prefer to hear from them?
Tim.
On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 2:06 PM, Ma
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 6:20 PM, Mark McBride wrote:
> Orian, is this still an issue? If so let me know...
>
It's been going on for awhile (week or so) with my account (@TJ) too.
They disappeared, reappeared, and then have largely disappeared again.
TjL
Yes, although we're keeping an eye on whether or not this is a large trend.
---Mark
http://twitter.com/mccv
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 5:02 PM, Tim Haines wrote:
> Mark,
> Are you guys fixing people 1 by 1 as they are reported?
> Tim.
>
> On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 12:20 PM, Mark McBride wrote:
>
Mark,
Are you guys fixing people 1 by 1 as they are reported?
Tim.
On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 12:20 PM, Mark McBride wrote:
> Orian, is this still an issue? If so let me know...
>
> ---Mark
>
> http://twitter.com/mccv
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 3:18 PM, Abraham Williams <4bra...@gmail.com>
You can also call http://jazzychad.net/iponly.php from your server to make
sure you got the correct IP whitelisted.
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 15:04, Brian Sutorius wrote:
> Hi,
> According to our records, your IP and account are still whitelisted.
> Is it possible that after following the additiona
I've been checking for the last 24 hrs and telling her she just has to
be patient and that it's probably a glitch (albeit a very very
distressing one). It seems that after posting here to the dev group
the glitch has resolved itself and over 2500 favorites have returned.
If anyone at Twitter was re
Marcel,
My screenname is aaronrankin and the list is called sprout-social-
contacts.
Thanks,
Aaron
On Jan 5, 12:57 pm, Marcel Molina wrote:
> Could you tell me your screen name and I'll pass your issue along to the
> team that maintains the list backend.
>
> On Mon, Jan 4, 2010 at 6:03 PM, Aar
Orian, is this still an issue? If so let me know...
---Mark
http://twitter.com/mccv
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 3:18 PM, Abraham Williams <4bra...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I just check out her favorites in my browser and loaded up the last 80 no
> problem. It was probably just a glitch with Twitter
I just check out her favorites in my browser and loaded up the last 80 no
problem. It was probably just a glitch with Twitter
Abraham
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 16:35, Orian Marx (@orian) wrote:
> I'm trying to help @whitneyhess figure out what happened to her
> favorites. Until yesterday she had se
I'm trying to help @whitneyhess figure out what happened to her
favorites. Until yesterday she had several hundred favorited tweets,
many of which were critical to her ongoing business as a freelancer.
Currently Twitter is returning 20. If anyone has any insight into what
is going on it would be *g
Ditto
On 1/4/10 7:58 PM, "Jesse Stay" wrote:
> Ditto PJB :-)
>
> On Mon, Jan 4, 2010 at 8:12 PM, PJB wrote:
>>
>> I think that's like asking someone: why do you eat food? But don't say
>> because it tastes good or nourishes you, because we already know
>> that! ;)
>>
>> You guys presumably
Hi,
According to our records, your IP and account are still whitelisted.
Is it possible that after following the additional accounts, you're
exceeding the whitelisted limit of 20K calls/hour? You can check the
HTTP response headers from any rate-limited REST API call to see how
many requests you ha
Post your query string. Don't necessarily need to see the code yet, just
need to see the URL that you are requesting.
The error means that your signature is incorrect.
Ryan
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 2:06 PM, Vikram wrote:
> When I try to get the QAuth Request token I get "Failed to validate
> oa
When I try to get the QAuth Request token I get "Failed to validate
oauth signature and token" error message from twitter.
What can be the possible reason?
If required I can share my entire code with you people.
Could you tell me your screen name and I'll pass your issue along to the
team that maintains the list backend.
On Mon, Jan 4, 2010 at 6:03 PM, Aaron Rankin wrote:
> I have a private list and both on twitter.com and via GET list /
> statuses, many tweets are missing. I confirmed this behavior by
The new dev site will indeed have a status dashboard.
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 8:07 AM, Dewald Pretorius wrote:
> Thanks John. I hope that included in Marcel's announced improvements
> will be an API status area where we can see that you are aware of
> issues. Take a page from Facebook in that reg
The Platform team can create a static parameter that governs the
maximum size of the initial "cursor". The API software will then use
this parameter value to build the list of ids returned in the first
API call.
The team can either modify this static parameter manually, or you can
create a process
That sounds like a good overall technique. It's very best-effort. I'm
concerned about implementation details though. The webserver may
defensively time out the connection a lot, and tight coordination
between container and process is difficult to manage in our stack. And
by difficult, I mean intrac
Every HTTP response code in the system is collected and reported upon
and the summary is front and center in our main operational
dashboards. We see them all and a 24/7 team reacts to any significant
negative rate changes.
The Platform team can speak to the new dev site features.
-John Kalucki
ht
Make that Ryan's announced improvements.
Marcel, stop combing your hair like Ryan's. I get confused.
On Jan 5, 12:07 pm, Dewald Pretorius wrote:
> Thanks John. I hope that included in Marcel's announced improvements
> will be an API status area where we can see that you are aware of
> issues. Ta
Thanks John. I hope that included in Marcel's announced improvements
will be an API status area where we can see that you are aware of
issues. Take a page from Facebook in that regard, with their Platform
Status page.
On Jan 5, 12:02 pm, John Kalucki wrote:
> We're very, perhaps acutely, aware.
>
We're very, perhaps acutely, aware.
Typos by iPhone.
On Jan 5, 2010, at 7:55 AM, Dewald Pretorius wrote:
Are you Twitter folks aware that the API has been kicking up a huge
dust storm of 502s on all API calls, beginning somewhere on January
4th, and still continuing at time of writing (11:00
Are you Twitter folks aware that the API has been kicking up a huge
dust storm of 502s on all API calls, beginning somewhere on January
4th, and still continuing at time of writing (11:00 AM EST)?
John,
To try and make it as transparent and seamless for external developers
as possible, I propose the following solution.
Change the API layer so that it returns as many ids as possible in the
first API call, regardless of whether cursor=-1 is present or omitted.
If your system is able to retur
Marcel,
I hear what you're saying. In this particular case you are simply
moving the system strain (and end user dissatisfaction) over on our
shoulders.
Right now I can process an account with more than 10,000 followers and
less than 200,000 followers in roughly 2 seconds. Assuming I have
5,000 o
Jessie,
My surprise shouldn't be a surprise. I'm sure the platform team is
well aware of the issues.
The fact that it works at 200k users could very well be inherently
unstable. Minor changes to the system elsewhere could cause this
number to drop without anyone knowing. We don't monitor this "br
If I can suggest you keep it backwards-compatible that would make much more
sense. I think we're all aware that over 200,000 or so followers it breaks.
So what if you kept the cursor-less nature, treat it like a cursor, but set
the returned cursor cap to be 200,000 per cursor? Or if it needs to
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 3:27 AM, pallabi paul wrote:
> Hi ,
> Thanks for your reply.But actually i am talking about the
> conversation thread returned by the twitter .I am using this url to get the
> conversation thread as xml.
>
> http://search.twitter.com/search/thread/statusid
If twitter
And so it is. Given the system implementation, I'm quite surprised
that the cursorless call returns results with acceptable reliability,
especially during peak system load. The documentation attempts to
convey that the cursorless approach is risky. "all IDs are attempted
to be returned, but large s
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