I am wondering if there are any companies that are providing access to
user streams as SaaS. I am looking for a service that will allow me to
setup filters specifically I only want DMs and I would want the
service to call my application via a callback URL when a DM is
received.
I have spent the da
/oauth/authorize
>
> Tom
>
> On 7/5/11 1:20 AM, DaveH wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Twitter Team:
>
> > My application was changed weeks ago to request DM permission. My
> > understanding was all we needed to do was edit the settings for the
> >
>
> On 7/5/11 1:20 AM, DaveH wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Twitter Team:
>
> > My application was changed weeks ago to request DM permission. My
> > understanding was all we needed to do was edit the settings for the
> > app, and then re-authenticat
Twitter Team:
My application was changed weeks ago to request DM permission. My
understanding was all we needed to do was edit the settings for the
app, and then re-authenticate the application. Which I did. When I
look at the app settings it shows that "Read, Write, Direct Messages"
is selected.
Change the message so that it can go into their activity stream
instead of a DM. It may be that you have less information, but a
"@storeowner, You just received an order" is better than nothing.
Granted with DM you could include more information, but at least a
generic message would suffice to have
Dossy:
Don't be so quick to condemn. I have an app that uses DMs and ALL DM
traffic is generated by users and they know it--so there is no
spamming. There are legitimate uses of DMs that users are OK with that
push an app beyond 250/day.
Think of it this way, if an application has 300 followers a
I disagree, Abraham. I requested whitelisting for my app because I
needed more than 250 DMs per day. Twitter granted my request and my
limit was increased considerably.
This may be that Twitter did not increase DMs as a default. But at one
time, if requested and justified, they would. This is why
I too am still worried about the DM limits.
If I understand the User API correctly.
- The user stream means that an unlimited number of DMs can be
received as there is no rate limit on receiving (consuming) of data.
- The application would send DMs via the REST API and therefore is
limited to send
Yes, Do tell. I have a whitelisted app, but came to the realization
that I needed to switch to IP based so that all users of the
application would have a higher DM limit--critical as my app is a
social learning tool for mobile users. Now it looks like my project is
dead in the water. Having each pe
Is there streamlined way to request change a whitelisted application
to IP whitelisted?
As I have been pondering my application and scale I have come to
realize that I really need to use several dedicated IPs instead of
maintaining the whitelisted application name.
--
Twitter developer documenta
I understand how to request permission via the callback, but...
What I would like to do is have the application that is already
whitelisted be able to post to multiple accounts--this is to support a
scenario where each Twitter account represents a single class (think
University). In this case the
Yaemog:
You are right, he does say he is posting to his Twitter Page and that
he is using oAuth. My bad...
So there is something else going on.
- Check that authentication was successful. The rate limit should be
higher if he has successfully authenticated.
- Check the return message from Twitte
Peter:
You mention 150/hour so I am guessing that you are not authenticating
with Twitter. This means that if there are any other applications
sharing the same IP address (shared hosting) then they are also using
the same rate limit as your app. If you authenticate you will get the
250/hour rateli
Does anyone have an update from the Twitter team on when t.co will
make its way into messages sent via API calls?
On Oct 16, 7:01 pm, DaveH wrote:
> What are the plans to implement the automaticallyt.courl shortening
> feature via tweets that are sent in via the API?
>
> I am gett
Josh:
The obvious thing is to register you app and then authenticate with
OAuth. You will then have your very own rate limit to consume based on
the application name.
On Oct 20, 4:57 pm, Josh wrote:
> Yeah...I forgot about the whole shared host thing. That really
> sucks. My application uses a
What are the plans to implement the automatically t.co url shortening
feature via tweets that are sent in via the API?
I am getting ready to add this ability to my application, but if
Twitter is going to make it an automatic feature then I can save
myself the trouble if they will have it implement
[ ] shareable [x] ask first [ ] private.
>
>
>
> On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 23:01, DaveH wrote:
> > My code is able to send and receive direct messages just fine. So when
> > I build the string to destroy an old direct message, I get a 404. It
> > does not make sense. The url
My code is able to send and receive direct messages just fine. So when
I build the string to destroy an old direct message, I get a 404. It
does not make sense. The url that is sent to Twitter is:
https://api.twitter.com/1/direct_message/destroy/1625579645.json
The ID is the message id that is ret
See if this chain of calls and the ratelimit remaining make any
sense...
API callReturned Ratelimit Remaining
Verify Credentials 188
Followers IDs181
Direct Messages 171
The request to verify credentials established that I have 188 calls
Here is my problem.
1. My Twitter account is set to "Protect My Tweets." It is private.
2. User 1234 send a follow request to my account.
3. My application authenticates with Twitter and using the friendships/
incoming call sees that a request to follow is pending.
4. My application sends a friend
twicket
>
> Hope that helps,
> Matt
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Aug 24, 2010 at 9:09 AM, DaveH wrote:
> > Matt:
>
> > Not sure what you want me to pick up in the documentation. I must be
> > missing something.
>
> > When I read the page on daily P
Matt:
Not sure what you want me to pick up in the documentation. I must be
missing something.
When I read the page on daily POST limits [http://support.twitter.com/
forums/10711/entries/15364] I see:
Current Twitter Limits
The current technical limits for accounts are:
Direct Messages: 250 per
I am working on a project that will make extensive use of the direct
message feature of Twitter. However, I see that there is a daily limit
of 250 direct messages. This will become an issue once I am out of
test and begin to deploy my application. What, if any, is the process
for requesting a highe
Strange that this was stated to be ready weeks ago and now we hear
nothing about the progress. Any one that is actually involved in
testing this able to weigh in and provide an update?
24 matches
Mail list logo