I have not yet seen the new Twitter iPhone client, but if this is true then it's exactly what we developers feared would happen, namely Twitter competing with developers and using secret API calls to offer features that external developers cannot offer. It's really not a good move, folks, because once you open that barn door, the horses just keep bolting, and you undermine an already shaky trust in the intentions of Twitter towards developers. I know this was not decided or done by Ryan's group, but someone in your group should do some serious advocacy here, because you're the ones who want us to trust you and continue to work with you in a non-combative environment.
On May 19, 8:17 am, Rich <rhyl...@gmail.com> wrote: > So Tweetie is now Twitter and has features that no other API client > can offer. > > How about giving us access to features that the new Tweetie has that > there is no public end point for such as signing up for an account or > suggested user lists?