I developed a few - a currency converter that got accepted into the
Konfabulator gallery, and my favourite - "Swear With Steve" (which
simply turned the volume up on your PC, swore very loudly, then
returned the volume to normal - a useful tool for developers), which
for some reason didn't get accepted.  (There's another version of this
- "Lie With Steve" which pulls a random inaccuracy from Dave's Web Of
Lies)  :-)

However, I've never found a widget that I'd use all the time.  Most of
them seem to replicate some system function (clocks are a prime
example - I have one in the bottom right of my screen, why do I need
one that I have to search for when I've got a load of windows open
across two screens?) or (like the currency converter) do a job I need
once in a blue moon.

The widget concept always struck me as a good idea, but the created
widgets seem to be a prime example of form over substance...

Just my 2p...

Cheers,

Rich.


On 9/26/06, Ian Forrester <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I was wondering what widgets people have played with in the past?

There seems to be so many and little interop between them all.

From my understanding Netvibes and Google widgets seem to be the most
straight forward to develop for? But Yahoo (still prefer Konfabulator as a
name) and Apple (dashboard) have the biggest percentage of the market. I
guess this will also change once Vista launches and has settled in.

Any thoughts?

Ian Forrester || backstage.bbc.co.uk


________________________________
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Keith
Sent: 26 September 2006 02:52
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [backstage] World Service Schedules


ah, perfect! Just what 'm after, thanks.

I think 'm going to have a crack at doing it as a Yahoo Widget first, if
that's successful I might look at making a better weekly schedule.
Cheers,
Keith
Living under the Jackboot
Australia is merely an island of
Antarctica, and of no further significance


Mario Menti wrote:
On 9/24/06, Matthew Somerville <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Keith wrote:
> > The problem 've run into is that WS schedules don't seem to provide a
> > feed of any sort. Does anyone have any ideas of how I could get around
this?
>
> The BBC Web API -
http://www0.rdthdo.bbc.co.uk/services/api/ - should prove
> very useful to you, the links you want are probably something like:
>
>
http://www0.rdthdo.bbc.co.uk/cgi-perl/api/query.pl?method=bbc.channel.getLocations&channel_id=BBCWrld&format=simple
>
http://www0.rdthdo.bbc.co.uk/cgi-perl/api/query.pl?method=bbc.channel.getInfo&channel_id=BBCWrld&format=simple
>
http://www0.rdthdo.bbc.co.uk/cgi-perl/api/query.pl?method=bbc.schedule.getProgrammes&channel_id=BBCWrld&limit=2&detail=schedule
>
> (the last giving you the schedule, I'm not sure how far in advance)
>
> Hope that's helpful. :)
> --
> ATB,    | http://www.dracos.co.uk/ |
http://www.bbc.co.uk/homearchive/
> Matthew | http://www.traintimes.org.uk/map/


Hi Keith,

you may also be interested in my "what's on now/next" modules at
http://bbcmodules.co.uk. They're based on the Web API mentioned by Matthew.
The modules don't show anything beyond now/next though, so won't show you
what's on later today..

BTW, Matthew's example of the API schedule call above, without the "limit"
parameter, will show you the schedule for the current day (i.e. up to
midnight today GMT):
http://www0.rdthdo.bbc.co.uk/cgi-perl/api/query.pl?method=bbc.schedule.getProgrammes&channel_id=BBCWrld&detail=schedule

Cheers,
Mario.



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