Thanks for the reply. Yes, I did see your earlier post. I was hoping
someone from Twitter would have greater insight into which media
hosting services they were working with (assuming Twitter would most
likely be involved at a corporate level with these other companies),
and what features may be lost in the conversion. As I mentioned, I
have already tested TwitPic and yFrog. But both no longer support
Upload Post. Do the others you mentioned also lose that
functionality? Img.ly is supposedly in the works. Is anything going
on with Posterous? Is the loss of Upload Post a systemic OAuth
issue for the time being?
It's not easy for some of us to submit app revisions in rapid
succession, and not including functionality in the first place is
always better than taking it away later. Any help anyone can provide
to help us get it (more right) the first time would be deeply
appreciated by all.
On May 31, 4:54 am, Rich rhyl...@gmail.com wrote:
I posted such a list a week or so back
I have successfully integrated:
Twitpic
Yfrog (they only allow the XML version of verify_credentials rather
than json)
Twitgoo
Mobypicture
Twitvid
I believe pikchur also supports it but I haven't had the chance to
test it yet
On May 31, 1:30 am, Ron meerkat...@gmail.com wrote:
With the clock ticking on Basic Authpocalypse (T-30 days and
counting), what is the state of media hosting providers with regards
to OAuth Echo compliance? Those of us developing mobile client apps
need about two weeks to get our revised apps through the relevant
approval processes, so we're down to about two weeks left before
needing to submit something or risk our apps not working anymore.
I have successfully tested with TwitPic and yFrog, but both seem to
have lost Upload Post functionality when moving to OAuth Echo.
Img.ly said they're still working on their implementation. Posterous
is still a ?
Can anyone share a list of providers ready to begin testing their new
OAuth Echo functionality, along with a heads-up about any lost
functionality resulting from the move? It's becoming increasingly
important to find out who's going to be on the playing field with what
functionality so we can revise our apps accordingly in advance of the
approaching deadline.