yes - we do this on occasion. we've done this before during world AIDS day
(if you had a hashtag of #red, then the tweet, on twitter.com, would turn
red), and now for malaria we are putting a mosquito on the tweet.
twitter.com is trying to drive people to understand and discover what's
going on in the world.
On Sat, Apr 24, 2010 at 9:42 PM, Jaanus jaa...@gmail.com wrote:
A fine answer, but does not answer the question ;) looks like you guys
are injecting custom images after some hashtags on the site?
J
On Apr 23, 10:20 pm, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com wrote:
http://hope140.org/endmalaria
On Fri, Apr 23, 2010 at 2:54 PM, John Meyer john.l.me...@gmail.com
wrote:
On 4/23/2010 3:42 PM, Jonathan Strauss wrote:
The last few tweets from @twitter feature the #endmalaria hash tag. On
some pages, likehttp://twitter.com/twitterand
http://twitter.com/#search?q=%23endmalaria,
the hash tag is followed by an image of a mosquito (http://
a1.twimg.com/a/1272044617/images/mosquito.gif) which is hyperlinked
to
a different page than the hash tag itself. Yet on other pages, like
http://twitter.com/twitter/status/12719532503, and in the API (http://
api.twitter.com/1/statuses/show/12719532503.xml), the mosquito image
doesn't appear at all.
What gives? Is this some kind of annotations test or something totally
different?
Well I wouldn't expect that a mosquito image appear on a text xml
file,
but it appears on the twitter 12719532503 status it appears.
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Raffi Krikorian
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Raffi Krikorian
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