Tag Archives: RSS

Twitter to RSS

It has been a while since I wanted to RSS a Twitter feed. It used to be that every user’s Twitter page had an RSS feed with it, making subscribing easy. That changed at some point (early 2011 based on time stamps of people trying to figure the new situation out?). Mainly for self-reminder purposes, here is how to create an RSS feed off a Twitter page/feed:

(1) Learn the user id for a Twitter account by copying and pasting the Twitter account name into idfromuser.com.

(2) Replace XXX with the user id in this url: https://twitter.com/statuses/user_timeline/XXX.rss

Note that there were a couple times that Google Reader was not able to subscribe.

Futzing and Displaying Unruly RSS Feeds

I am currently working on a Web site for my latest and absolutely greatest adventure of competing in the 2010 Montgomery Country Agricultural Fair‘s demolition derby. I want this Web site to provide multimedia content, descriptions and plans, as well as nicely displayed RSS feeds of my blog and SMS systems relevant to my demolition derby effort. Probably because of my own ignorance and lack of knowledge (remember, I’m a political/economic analyst, not a developer) but possibly because of a(nother) bug with StatusNet, I had difficulty using PHP to repost posts that contain a certain hashtag. After trying to do it the “correct” way for an hour or two, I decided to do it the easy hacky way and did so in five minutes. Here’s the deal in case you come across a similar problem:

For my homepage, I swiped Matt Thommes’ PHP to display RSS/ATOM feeds in another page. It took some tweaking (and learning), but I used his structure/framework to get my blog and sms sites to load. This works well, is clear, and allows for a good degree of flexibility.

For the demolition derby Web site, I want to post notices from my sms site that contain the #demoderby hashtag. That way, I can continue to use whatever information delivery methods I prefer (e.g., blog or sms) with it all being delivered to one place for people who want to follow the destruction. At first, I played with the various badges (for StatusNet systems) that exist out there, but I could not get the first two I tried to work and none of them seemed well configured for limiting posts to certain hashtags. The next step was to use Thommes’ PHP structure to use the RSS feed a StatusNet install provides for a given hashtag. This, however, wouldn’t work because–I think–of the URL StatusNet uses for hashtags’ RSS feeds.

After about two hours of total hunting and searching (starting from the badge search), I gave up and decided to add a tweak to Thommes’ code. I essentially include a line that checks to see if a given notice contains the hashtag. If it doesn’t, do nothing and move on to the next notice. If it does, then display the tag. It took me five minutes to do, and should have been how I started. Oh well.

Here’s the tweaked code:

# INSTANTIATE CURL.
$curl = curl_init();

# CURL SETTINGS.
curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_URL, "http://sms.jasonkoepke.com/api/statuses/user_timeline/1.atom");
Curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, 1);
curl_setopt($curl, CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT, 0);

# GRAB THE XML FILE.
$xmlSMSFeed = curl_exec($curl);

curl_close($curl);

# SET UP XML OBJECT.
$xmlObjSMSFeed = simplexml_load_string($xmlSMSFeed);

$tempCounter = 0;

#Specify the hash you care about
$hashofconcern = "#demoderby";

foreach ($xmlObjSMSFeed->entry as $smsitem)
{
# DISPLAY ONLY 3 ITEMS.
if ( $tempCounter < 3 )
{
$pos = strpos($smsitem->title, $hashofconcern);
if ($pos === false)
{
#We don't want to display non-hashtagged posts, so this if statment has nothing.
}
else
{
echo " id."">".$smsitem -> published.": ".$smsitem -> title."

";
}
}

$tempCounter += 1;
}

Hope that helps someone, or someone comments the obvious and easier way of doing all this.

Some Recent Cool Tech Articles

I recently started my new job and some other activities so I’m way behind on posting and Web surfing. I caught up today (1000+ unreads in RSS; 30 unread e-mails from today; hitting my usual daily Web site reading list, etc.).

In catching up, I’ve come across some cool tech articles:

Nokia preps phones for Web serving (via /.; start screaming Ben)

Prevent Thumbs.db (for Windows users)

I like robot sports for some reason; this one is golf

If you still haven’t RSSed this, you’re asking for it