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yc c

Grafitter // Visualizing Your Life on Twitter, IM, Delicious, and Blogger. - 0 views

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    Neat idea - Grafitter is a way collecting information about your self over time while sending updates with Twitter, using IM, saving bookmarks on Delicious, and writing a post on Blogger. Grafitter visualizes the information you record in graphs.
yc c

Twitter Facts & Figures (history & statistics) | Website Monitoring Blog - 0 views

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    Twitter history, milestones, user & Tweet statistics, top 10 countries, top 20 users (most followed). Information collected from multiple sources in April 2010. Some data may not be up to date.
yc c

Tweeps.info - tracking your tweeps! - 0 views

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    What do they tweet about? How much do they tweet? How social are they? Do they use hashtags? Share URLs? Tweeps.info answers these questions and more. We analyze the content of Twitter users' tweets to find interesting statistics about them. We'll even tell you whether a user seems to be a prominent person or celebrity, or whether they display bot-like behavior.
yc c

Foller.me - Before you follow... - 0 views

shared by yc c on 07 Feb 10 - Cached
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    twitter info by username
yc c

preona - Solving Information Overload On The Internet - 0 views

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    LazySharer is a bookmarklet tool that helps you quickly share links with your friends on Twitter, Facebook and Delicious. The main focus is that you can share links quicker to the right services and it also suggests tags which you can use to later find your content or just to discover new connections.
yc c

@twitterapi's countdown to Basic Auth removal - 0 views

  • On June 30, 2010 (8 weeks and 6 days from now), the @twitterapi team will be shutting off basic authentication on the Twitter API — you can see the announcement here (and, this has been previously announced). All applications, by this date, need to switch to using OAuth. Don't fret! @twitterapi is here to help! Feel free to reach out to us directly, or via our Twitter Development Talk group. The switch to OAuth is a good thing! You, as the application developer, don't have to worry about exposing the credentials for your users whether through a bug or other means (especially considering that a lot of people use the same password for multiple services); don't have to worry about the user changing their password — a user can change his or her password and the OAuth "connection" to your app will still work; don't have to worry about other applications masquerading as your application as only your application can set the byline with your application name; will eventually have access to more APIs from Twitter that will only be available to "trusted" OAuth-enabled applications; and give the @twitterapi team more visibility into the network — you help us identify your application when there are bugs, you help us plan for capacity, and you help us squash spam.
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    The change will only affect the REST API, while the streaming API will continue to support basic authentication.
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