It's also responding with the 500 in less than two seconds (sometimes less
than one), which makes timeouts seem unlikely.
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: https://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: https://twitter.com/twitterapi
Issues/Enhancements Tracker: https://cod
I considered that, but this fails too:
http://search.twitter.com/search.json?rpp=4&q=bieber&geocode=33.25,-84,12.35mi
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: https://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: https://twitter.com/twitterapi
Issues/Enhancements Tracker: https://code.go
json?rpp=100&lang=en&result_type=recent&q=palin&geocode=33.44,-84.99,12.35mi>
(geocode
only) works fine.
I tested a few of these without rpp, lang, and result_type params with
identical results, so you can probably disregard those.
These aren't random failures - every t
We're also seeing 400s on different boxes across different IP
addresses with different queries (so it does not appear to be server
or query specific). These began on all boxes at 2 a.m. UTC. We've
backed off on both number and rate of queries with no effect. We've
also noticed an increase in sporad
uot;need" this consistency, but you don't. You want it, and
are willing to make tradeoffs to get it. I just hope you realize how big
those tradeoffs are, and how chilling it is for Twitter to decide that only
certain kinds of innovation on the Twitter API are welcome.
-- Eric
--
Twitte
Hi. I'm creating mobile clients (Android - iPhone) for a website which
uses a twitter application configured as Web.
Mobile applications require twitter applications configured as client,
disconnecting the mobile apps users with the website. Is there a
workaround?
Does anyone dealt with this before
Same question here.
Eric
On Feb 17, 12:59 am, aci wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am using the streaming api in order to be able to save tweets that
> uses the geoJSON place key of the returned json object. Tt was working
> fine last Tuesday, Feb 15, But now, there seems to be a problem w
Was the cause of the empty response body ever discovered? I'm having
a similar issue, except my 401 response body has "Content-Length: 1"
containing an empty space " ".
On Nov 19 2010, 3:44 pm, Matt Harris
wrote:
> Hey Chrys,
>
> Agreed. The authentication header doesn't have to be in order but
I'm trying to to get xAuth to work with my application, using libcurl
and a modified TwitCurl engine. Whenever I attempt to obtain an
access token, I get a 401 error that contains a single space character
(0x20) and nothing else, which is extremely unhelpful. Whenever I try
to do other things tha
anybody can help ?
2010/12/30 Macro
> when i user search api like :
> http://search.twitter.com/search.json?q=google
> for a keyword, i just get a list ,but i also want to get the all posts
> count retweets count or like that.
>
> I have no idea any APIs can help me to get this and t would like
rs the filter should have that information.
Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
Best,
Eric Humphrey
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi
Issues/Enhancements Tracker: http://code.google.com/p/tw
We are seeing same at Twitalyzer. Seems to be isolated to the search
API but we haven't had a chance to dig in.
The problems seem to be correlated to Twitter's announcement of the
new search platform as well. Anyone else seeing lower rate limits on
the search API last few days?
@erictpeterson
I'll start digging into the Search API and seeing how that performs.
I can tell you from experience that the streaming API does not
currently carry the expanded URL metadata in its payload. All you get
is a match on raw tweet content.
On Sep 24, 6:34 am, Brian Medendorp wrote:
> I just did a
ctual body text as opposed to metadata.
What is the most effective strategy to consume a feed of domain-
specific tweets at this point?
Thanks!
Eric
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi
Issues/Enhan
Greetings,
Thank you for the offer. I resubmitted my request on Friday.
My username is @evidencebot with the email e...@ecei.tohoku.ac.jp
Take care,
Eric Nichols
Tohoku University
On Aug 17, 2010, at 11:32 PM, Taylor Singletary wrote:
> We're still pretty backed up and taking a di
On behalf of the Internet. Thank you.
~e
On Wed, Aug 18, 2010 at 3:45 PM, Brian Sutorius wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Over the past 24 hours, we've received some questions about the
> Twifficiency app, so we thought we'd use this as an opportunity to
> quickly share some information around our Developer
my
application slipped through the cracks somehow?
Thank you for your time,
Eric Nichols
Tohoku University
ut I wouldn't expect
> any more detail than that. It's been mentioned in this group before
> that exact numbers can't be given about some limits. They can change
> at any time and spammers could use that info to fly under the spam
> team's radar.
>
> On Jul 29, 3:
at
> once. I'm not familiar with the code that handles the measure windows or
> what the limits are but consider that 1000 tweets per day is approx 42 per
> hour.
>
> Matt
>
>
> On Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 8:59 AM, Eric Mortensen wrote:
>
>> For instance, set up the
1000 daily limit since it was only 200 tweets. I will try this again in
about 1 hour. I should be able to start tweeting again. Let me know what
you think?
On Wed, Jul 28, 2010 at 12:19 PM, Eric Mortensen wrote:
> But, It appears did not hit a 1000 update limit since after an hour and
ld be
another reason for this.
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 6:56 PM, Matt Harris wrote:
> Hey Eric,
>
> That error is the Twitter Limits kicking in saying there are too many
> status updates being posted by the account. This isn't an API rate limit but
> a natural limit which applies
Here is a response:
User is over daily status update limit.
/1/statuses/update.xml
On Thu, Jul 15, 2010 at 5:41 PM, Matt Harris wrote:
> Hey Eric,
>
> Sorry that help article didn't answer your question. Can you provide the
> actual HTTP request being made and the HTTP
Unfortunately not. Do you have anything else that might explain it?
On Thu, Jul 15, 2010 at 1:48 PM, Matt Harris wrote:
> Hi Eric,
>
> In addition to the API Rate Limits there are general usage limits which
> apply to all of Twitter, including the website. These limits restri
It appears that I am hitting a 150 post rate limit when I use the
statuses/update.xml api to update a twitter account eventhough I
should not have this limit doing only a post. Is there a reason why?
Here is the code I am using from oracle to do this:
create or replace PACKAGE BODY tweet
AS
twi
t;web" app with the same usage characteristics be qualify
as a desktop app?
Cheers!
Eric
n.
We have looked at the Stream API but it's not clear to me that Stream
API solves for our specific needs. I'm happy to go into all of this
more deeply with Twitter API staff and can be reached at
e...@twitter.com or 503-282-2601.
Thanks for any/all help.
Sincerely,
Eric T. Peterson
> Topic: Where to post documentation bugs?
> Url:
> http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk/t/963f9650a5d79c00
> =
>
> -- 1 of 1 --
> From: Andrew
> Date: Ju
> Topic: Where to post documentation bugs?
> Url:
> http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk/t/963f9650a5d79c00
> =
>
> -- 1 of 1 --
> From: Andrew
> Date: Ju
Thanks. I did look through the archives before posting but did not
find anything. I will look harder next time. I still don't see where
in the OAuth specifications it says this comparison is necessary, but
I will continue to look around.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
On May
udied this issue per se. I have only been trying to resolve the
issue for us to move on to something more important. Our OAuth
implementation works fine otherwise. Well, as well as the rest of the
Twitter API "works", anyway.
Cheers.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
s (Twitter clients) and now it is the ad
platforms' turn. Next it will be somebody else.
Lots of us enjoy developing for its own sake, and that is what Twitter
is now: a feature you add to something else, or a hobby activity. Time
we all just faced up to it.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.
We are using the Streaming API and will only be using our own
credentials. Our experience with OAuth in other services has not been
positive, so like TJ says "huge hassle for no gain".
+1
Thanks.
-Eric
On May 18, 9:28 am, TJ Luoma wrote:
> On Tue, May 18, 2010 at 11:32 AM,
On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 22:08, Eric wrote:
> > Hi Everyone,
>
> > I'm attempting to use the twittoauth library by Abraham Williams and
> > am having a little trouble. I am able to authenticate and get
> > everything, for the most part, working properly. The o
Hi Everyone,
I'm attempting to use the twittoauth library by Abraham Williams and
am having a little trouble. I am able to authenticate and get
everything, for the most part, working properly. The only thing I
can't do is get the background image to update.
Function I'm Using in index.php:
$conne
Is the point of oauth_single_token that you can only work with a
single account? Meaning if I have a feature on my site, I can't use
this library to interact with the users accounts, I can only use this
library to work with my own, or one account?
Much appreciated!
On May 3, 2:35 pm, Abraham Will
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 1:09 AM, M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
> Are there any plugins for @anywhere that will run on Drupal and
> WordPress? My blog is on WordPress, and I want to get rid of as many
> non-Twitter gizmos and widgets as possible. I'll be keeping AddToAny,
> since it goes to Develop
competence that they must accept their development efforts
as only ending up as a nice lifestyle business. Anything more, and
Twitter will move to take it from you, simple as that.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambuc.om
On Apr 12, 10:39 am, Michael Macasek wrote:
> Ryan,
>
> Great
don't really expect a response, but I need to
ask.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
--
To unsubscribe, reply using "remove me" as the subject.
since day one, and no one at
Twitter has ever seemed to mind much (or it would have been fixed long
ago). They do have bigger ongoing problems, I will grant.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
e...@nambu.com
On Apr 5, 9:19 am, Abraham Williams <4bra...@gmail.com> wrote:
> There is now a petition goi
mmon 3-5
> years ago, and nothing I've read or heard seems to indicate that has
> changed.
>
> ∞ Andy Badera
> ∞ +1 518-641-1280 Google Voice
> ∞ This email is: [ ] bloggable [x] ask first [ ] private
> ∞ Google me:http://www.google.com/search?q=andrew%20badera
>
>
&
to log-in but it's annoying...
However, other Twitter clients like twitterific look to work
wonderfull...
On 24 mar, 16:16, Raffi Krikorian wrote:
> hi eric.
>
> are you authenticating to this call, or are these unauthenticated? i'd be
> curious to know if you'r
I have made complementary tests on my iPhone with
http://api.twitter.com/1/account/rate_limit_status.json and i get
theses results :
{"reset_time_in_seconds":1269426542,"reset_time":"Wed Mar 24 10:29:02
+ 2010","remaining_hits":132,"hourly_limit":150}
{"hourly_limit":150,"reset_time":"Wed Mar
Hi, (sorry for my English)
I currently develop a little twitter client for my iPhone application,
and i have a problem with the rate limit when i'm connected in 3G/
Edge. (no problem when connected in WIFI)
This parameter look to be completly random !
For example, there are the returned values f
several.
Many apologies for any work you had to do to drop some knowledge on
me :)
Eric
On Feb 12, 9:22 am, Raffi Krikorian wrote:
> hi eric.
>
> just to make sure i understand what you're saying - you're saying that the
> geo tag (from the geotagging API) is not showing
aluable to my customers. Any plans to
change this policy would be rad.
Thanks!
Eric
(on my iPhone. Sorry for typeos)
On Feb 11, 8:20 pm, Raffi Krikorian wrote:
> each user has a location field associated with it - but that is self
> reported.
>
>
>
>
>
> On Thu, F
Hello,
I'd like to be able to request just the first status in a timeline
after an arbitrary ID. Using since_id=###&count=1 gives the latest
status, which seems like the proper result.
since_id=###&page=##&count=1, where the page number is higher than the
number of statuses, returns no tweets. I
is is a considered email because I care about the quality of our
Twitter implementation and I care about the Twitter ecosystem. I would
appreciate a considered reply.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
Heya, this will definitely work for now. Thanks for the good idea.
Eric
On Dec 29, 10:45 am, Raffi Krikorian wrote:
> hi eric.
>
> yup - you've hit it right on the head. one of the main initiatives in us
> starting to version our API is so that we can really consolidate and
to
separate error codes. Perhaps a 401 for bad credentials and a 402 for
lack of authorization for a specific piece of content.
Please let know if I've overlooked something that would help me
disambiguate the use cases in the current system.
Thanks!
Eric
Folks,
For some reason I ** cannot ** seem to make a request for /account/
verify_credentials.xml via an ASP-based request. I'm using
Server.CreateObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP") and generating the following
URL:
http://twitter.com/account/verify_credentials.xml?oauth_consumer_key=GWLrrqixPNWscdvwpH
Any resolution or news?
On Nov 10, 11:07 pm, Eric Gilbert wrote:
> Great. Thanks, Marcel. Looking forward to the answer. My guess: limit
> on concurrent follows as countermeasure against bots?
>
> On Nov 10, 12:41 pm, Marcel Molina wrote:
>
> > Indeed something looks strang
How is it possible no one from Twitter would respond to this?
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
On Nov 16, 10:03 am, Eric Woodward wrote:
> So, unless it has changed or I messed up test queries, users that I
> have blocked still appear in Lists timelines when I request these
&
to hear from. If this is a noisy
prominent well-known person it detracts from almost all Lists in
defined vertical segments.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
d. I'll let you know
> what they discover.
>
>
>
> On Mon, Nov 9, 2009 at 10:20 PM, Eric Gilbert wrote:
>
> > I'm developing an app that builds a few lists. Since it seems the only
> > way to add users to lists is one id per call (please let me know if
> >
Yes.
On Nov 10, 12:30 am, Tim Haines wrote:
> Does creating the same list twice via sync'ed methods result in
> duplicate streams?
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On 10/11/2009, at 7:20 PM, Eric Gilbert wrote:
>
>
>
> > I'm developing an app that
eegilbert/notsoright
Strange.
Cheers,
Eric
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
On Oct 31, 3:01 pm, twittelator wrote:
> Whoops - what I meant to say was:
>
> :user//lists/subscriptions.:format
>
> will get the lists a user has subscribed to
>
> Andrew Stone
> Twitter / @twittelatorhttp://www.stone.com
>
/ejwc/lists
returns my three test lists, and the 5+ lists I am following.
Any suggestions? I have only just started getting a response for the
API methods in the last day or so and only getting familiar with them.
Any help would be appreciated.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
Rich, I think you answered your own question there, the first one
anyway. I would not expect a real answer to the second one.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
On Oct 26, 2:30 am, Rich wrote:
> Seriously have we got a two tier dev system now, can we all have
> access to t
a lot further along you are letting on here.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
On Oct 15, 4:19 pm, Marcel Molina wrote:
> We are rolling it out to a small set of users incrementally so that we
> can load test and find bugs. We've been working on the API
> documentation and
So, what is the plan for releasing the Lists API, if there is one? It
is well known that selected people have access to them while the rest
of us do not, which is creating a problem with users. Is there a plan
to release these APIs to everyone soon?
Please respond. I am only asking.
--ejw
Eric
, let alone have a chance to
already build features on top of them, while those are that are
blessed are already working on them.
--ejw
Eric Woodward
Email: e...@nambu.com
If I have an email address, can I query somehow to find a person's
twitter page?
Hey guys, I've been working on a full implementation of the twitter
API through, primarily, jQuery, with a simple relay script server side
for securely signing and keeping auth details. I've just finished the
library, and am looking for some developers who know both the twitter
API and jQuery to h
If you're using the twitter rubygem, the problem is detailed here
http://groups.google.com/group/ruby-twitter-gem/browse_thread/thread/6e935089d55a92c2.
Basically the twitter gem isn't using the newest oauth gem properly,
and using an older version of the oauth gem seems to fix everything.
Hopefu
I'm having the same problem--getting a PIN instead of being redirected
at the end of the oauth flow. My application is set as a browser-type
app, and I'm providing a callback url.
Everything was working as expected for the past couple of weeks, the
problem started when the API became available ag
Any idea when the limit will be increased to 20,000? I'm sure myself
as well as other sites are suffering a bit because of the limitation
of API calls.
On Aug 7, 4:54 pm, Chad Etzel wrote:
> Hi Paul (and everyone),
>
> Thanks for your appreciation and your comments.
>
> On a personal note: I sta
Hey all,
I'm working on a Javascript library for full API access with Twitter,
and a current hickup in the system is fetching the oAuth token from
Javascript.
I'm new to the twitter API, so I'm not sure if I'm missing something,
but I can't seem to get my API call to:
http://twitter.com/oauth/r
Is there another way to view friend's timeline without "
https://username:passw...@twitter.com/statuses/friends_timeline.xml";?
For some reason, the iPod Touch/iPhone won't recognize the URL when I try it
out.
I can still retrieve the Public timeline though because there isn't the "
username:passw
I'd be interested to see a document that details the standards for
this as well.
On May 15, 12:01 pm, leoboiko wrote:
> > On May 15, 2:03 pm, leoboiko wrote:
> > while one with 71 UTF-8
> > bytes might not (if they’re all non-GSM, say, ‘ç’ repeated 71 times).
>
> Sorry, that was a bad example:
where there
would be such a consistent difference between the two environments.
--Eric
On May 8, 2009, at 6:41 PM, Doug Williams wrote:
Eric,
I was right next to Alex when he made the fix for Issue 300 and I
remember seeing it deployed. I'll check
Yeah, I filed 300 a while ago and it was marked as fixed, so I was
surprised when I saw HTML.
--Eric
On May 8, 2009, at 6:08 PM, Doug Williams wrote:
The issues tell the story:
http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list?can=1&q=maintenance&colspec=ID+Stars+Type+Status+
Any reason the API is serving up an HTML page instead of the normal
error XML?
--Eric
On May 8, 2009, at 1:50 PM, Michael Bailey wrote:
Thanks for the clarification Doug. Stock up on some RedBull and best
of luck for a smooth upgrade to the team!
Michael Bailey
Doug Williams wrote
Doug,
I think using the same "URL" would work, but it might be nice to have
an extra (or different) param added in order to determine the reason.
For example, if a user revokes access from the web and Twitter
notifies the "URL", the app may just be updating values in a DB, not
displaying anythin
Damn. That was it. Thanks for the pointer.
--Eric
On Apr 22, 2009, at 7:58 PM, Matt Sanford wrote:
Hi Eric,
If you do a friendships/create?follow=true is will turn on
notifications when the follower is added. Poorly named parameter, I
know.
— Matt
On Apr 22, 2009, at 04:31 PM
ng in my
logs indicating the I called /notifications/follow.
I've looked through the API docs and the settings on Twitter and
nothing's jumped out at me.
Thanks,
--Eric
Alex - seems to still be an issue. Any updates on when we might see a
fix?
On Mar 30, 12:49 pm, Alex Payne wrote:
> We're on this. Thanks for the reports.
>
>
>
> On Sun, Mar 29, 2009 at 18:27, Gary Zhao wrote:
> > I'm seeing it too.
>
> > 2009/3/29 Günter Grodotzki
>
> >> since some days I am
increased my posting timeout in code, but I've also filed a bug,
since I'd expect Twitter's duplicate detection code to catch these
cases.
http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/detail?id=440
--Eric
On Apr 9, 2009, at 3:01 PM, Chad Etzel wrote:
Reviving old thread:
See
ed, but the messages are id 1440033342
and 1440033271. I log the ids of successful posts and, in my logs, I
see the higher id (1440033342).
--Eric
On Apr 2, 2009, at 6:03 PM, Doug Williams wrote:
> If your application tries to update the status of the same account
> within a short pe
rough my retry code?
--Eric
128.121.146.85 0.4% 3526 56.0
57.8 52.0 512.0 18.5
14. 128.121.146.1000.6% 3525 52.0
56.1 52.0 436.0 17.0
--Eric
On Feb 20, 2009, at 11:27 AM, Matt Sanford wrote:
>
> The times may help me do some network troublesh
I've been seeing that a bit the past few days as well (it looks like
the email I sent to the list yesterday about curl multi was an HTTP
Status 0 issue).
We were outputting the curl output from our app to a file for a bit -
it definitely seemed like the cases with status code 0 weren't
co
g this issue - I reverted back to the
default curl timeout as an experiment). Other times, curl reports that
it "Couldn't connect to host"
Thanks,
--Eric
ng the If-
> Modified-Since parameter in your HTTP request. Ex:
> http://twitter.com/direct_messages.atom?since=Tue%2C+27+Mar+2007+22%3A55%3A48+GMT
--Eric
On Jan 31, 2009, at 6:52 PM, Dimebrain wrote:
>
> output of unit test (calling since with date prior twitter launch,
> fails w
a few seconds later will succeed.
We've seen this both from within our application and from attempting
an authenticated call via curl on the command line. I've filed a bug
against the behavior, but I was wondering if anybody else had hit this
issue and had any ideas.
--Eric
http://help.twitter.com/";>here.
--Eric
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