Ah, that did the trick. Thank you so much.

On Apr 14, 7:43 pm, Taylor Singletary <taylorsinglet...@twitter.com>
wrote:
> Hi Guillermo,
>
> You'll want to go tohttp://twitter.com/oauthand adjust your clients to
> have write access there for the time being. We'll re-enable the ability to
> toggle that status in edit mode on the dev portal soon.
>
> In the brave new world, all applications are read/write applications.
> Without fine-grained per-resource control, there's very little use in being
> black and white on read/write operations in totality.
>
> Personally, I think it's best to create an entirely new application record
> for @Anywhere. Separate concerns.
>
> Taylor Singletary
> Developer Advocate, Twitterhttp://twitter.com/episod
>
>
>
> On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 3:46 PM, Guillermo Esteves <g...@gesteves.com> wrote:
> > Hey,
>
> > I have a quick question regarding @anywhere. Let's just say that we're
> > very excited about it here where I work, and as soon as I learnt that
> > it was alive I started working on integrating them to a few sites,
> > starting with my own blog, just to try it out. Five minutes later, I
> > had already integrated hovercards, follow buttons and a tweet box, and
> > it was fantastic… except for the fact that I can't tweet or do
> > anything with the hovercards. I assume it's because my application has
> > a "read-only" access level, but I don't see a setting to change it or
> > any information about this.
>
> > What can I do to get write access to my apps?
>
> > --
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