I'll start with a service that *lots* of people asked for - an OPML import web app. The application would be givan an OPML list of RSS/ATOM feeds and the app would import the feeds into desired FF groups. Since the FF API doesn't have all the functionallity needed for this, someting in the line of the Mechanize library (http://wwwsearch.sourceforge.net/mechani...) would probably have to be used.
- Ivan Zuzak
Another similar idea is a Twitter-import app that would import all your Twitter contacts as imaginary friends on FriendFeed.
- Ivan Zuzak
Ivan: an alternative is to generate a combined RSS feed from the OPML
- Mike Chelen
You're right Mike, and actually Lucio (http://friendfeed.com/cantorjf) made a Yahoo Pipe which does exactly that - http://friendfeed.com/friendf.... His Pipe combines all the feeds in the OPML file into a single feed which you can then import into FF more easily. I'll add it to the existing tools-and-services list.
- Ivan Zuzak
Ivan: Yup that's the one, thanks! A tool to go the other way, Friendfeed to OPML, would also be useful.
- Mike Chelen
I would like the option of turning off/on twitter feeds -- specifically, to be able to mark from a list people whose tweets I'd like to see and those I would not.
- Mickey Schafer
How about adding Dislike button? can't be done? sometimes we see Sad stories, Dislike would seem more appropriate at the time.
- ♕Dr. Eynollah شایگان ♕
Internet buttons and domain controllers, The headache has given me this? ... if the API is not sufficient nor desarrolladores.secuencia maneuvering to reach the link.
- Caridad Tovar
انگشتای میلاد طرفدار پیدا کرده میخواد شعبه هاشو بیشتر کنه.هر انگشت توی یک ناف :دی...بد خواه مد خواه دارید به میلاد مراجعه کنید .طرف رو در جا ناف آویزون میاره پیشتون:دی
Put.io'nun değerini gün geçtikçe daha iyi anlayacağız. Lakin ortada torrent kalmaması durumunda ne olacak o da ayrı bir mesele... Put.io'nun buna da kafa yormasında fayda var. Hexagon.cc de Isohunt'ın benzer bir uygulaması. Ona da üyeyim ama tam değerlendirme fırsatını bulamadım. Bu arada Google Wave Gmail gibi tek başına kullanılacak bir servis değil. Google 20'şer davetiyeyi anında...
more...
- Cem ARGUN
Evet bu konuda hak vermemek elde değil. Aylardır davetiye peşinde koşan insanlar şimdi " Google Wave fos çıktı" gibi geri dönüşlerle karşılaşıyor. Bence eğer proje belli bir seviyeye geldiyse belirli platformlarda kullanıma açılmalıydı mesela friendfeed, linkedin gibi hesaplardan googlewave'e geçiş verilebilirdi. Bu şekilde daha sağlıklı bir beta sürecini geçirilmiş olurdu.
- Eren Can
ne güzel ama benim hala put.io'm yok :)
- Eren Can
put.io candır (: Eren'de candır. O zaman Eren'e put.io gerek.
- Burçin Mumcuoğlu
put.io mu vasat. Vay bee.. StumbleUpon da çalışan Berk'in anlattığına göre herkes ona hayran oluyor ama Ersin Abi ye göre vasat. Değişik...
- Bahadır ARSLAN
Tiger! Tiger! burning bright In the forests of the night: What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
- Yet Mikt
şu gife de blake'i sokup şairane ortam yarattın ya...aslansın... hatta kaplansın...
- gonzoff
acaba videonun sonu nasıl bitiyor ? Tırsmış bil fil ve tok bir kaplan görüntüsümü ? Yada Tırsmış bir fil yaralanmış bir adam ve delik bir kaplan postumu :D Ama tok kaplan senaryosu olabilitesi daha yüksek gibi :D
- FıratAydın / motorizedeli
How often have you heard the phrase, "Never assume" (insert the cheesy catch phrase that was funny in 6th grade here). For the record, it's wrong. When designing our security, disaster recovery, or whatever, the problem isn't that we make assumptions, it's that we make the wrong assumptions. To narrow it down even more, the problem is when we make false assumptions, and typically those assumptions skew towards the positive, leaving us unprepared for the negative. Actually, I'll narrow this down even more... the ONE assumption to avoid is a single phrase- "that will never happen". There's really no way to perform any kind of forward looking planning without some basis of assumptions. The trick to avoiding problems is that these assumptions should generally skew to the negative, and must always be justified, not merely accepted. It's also important to not make all your decisions on worst case scenario assumptions, since that leads to excessive costs, but at least if you expose these...
- Hacker News
Is there any way of finding out apart from the email? I can't find mine.
- Martin Bryant
No idea. I cant even find the email now, maybe i trashed it :(
- Simon Wicks
I know it's my 4th birthday on Last.fm next week, but they display it on the profile. It not really important, but it makes you realise how fast time goes...
- Martin Bryant
my last.fm 4th year is in October, it actually seems more than that on there though.
- Simon Wicks
Happy FFbirthday, very glad to see you all
- Manuela
Just checked my Wakoopa stats on friendfeed, which i started using well after i signed up here, still interesting to see its this high though: '6 days, 22 hours, 58 minutes and 49 seconds' Tracking started: 21 October 2008. 3rd most used thing with Firefox and MSN Messenger beating it. Not including times like now when im not on my computer..
- Simon Wicks
Don't argue with Grampa (Louis) Gray. He started it back when iPods still had those circle dialy thingamabobs.
- Josh Haley
Seesmic, Friendfeed and Twitter next to each other in a test version of Twhirl. Adding tons of Friendfeed experience improvements in there, Marco rocks.
Is twitter's api actually back up at 50 req/hr?
- Shawn Farner
The old Twhirl works for me in linux for me, it just won't remember my password.
- Daniel E. Renfer
from twhirl
Yes Marco does. Twhirl is becoming my info hub. And if Twitter dies, who cares I'm sure Pownce, Jaiku or whatever could be swapped in
- Tris Hussey
from twhirl
Not the same argument - RSS is still widely used, Lisp isn't. To think Twitter or FriendFeed are replacing it, that's ridiculous. The argument would be more accurately compared to C. Despite no one "using it" and instead using Perl, Ruby, PHP, etc., C is still widely used, and is the backbone of most software development. Or even more - compare it to assembly.
- Jesse Stay