This is what i get using RSS, where is the element you mention?
entry
idtag:search.twitter.com,2005:7105513237/id
published2009-12-28T00:35:07Z/published
link type=text/html href=http://twitter.com/Hannahxx18/
statuses/7105513237 rel=alternate/
titleWhy Go For Dedicated Hosting?
additional question. What is the easiest way to obtain a KML feed of tweets?
Pipes?
On Sun, Dec 27, 2009 at 4:59 PM, DomingoSL djsoftla...@gmail.com wrote:
This is what i get using RSS, where is the element you mention?
entry
idtag:search.twitter.com,2005:7105513237/id
note the twitter:geo/ tags - this particular tweet was not sent using the
geotagging API. if it were, then that tag would not be empty.
On Sun, Dec 27, 2009 at 4:59 PM, DomingoSL djsoftla...@gmail.com wrote:
This is what i get using RSS, where is the element you mention?
entry
Sure??? Do this query:
http://search.twitter.com/search.atom?geocode=10.49605%2C-66.898277%2C25.0kmq=+near%3A%22Caracas%2C+Venezuela%22+within%3A25km
And you will see that all the twitter:geo/ tags are empty...
On Dec 27, 10:09 pm, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com wrote:
note the twitter:geo/
considering i wrote that code, i'm pretty sure :P
i would postulate that there are nobody sending geotweets (tweets using the
geotagging API) near caracas. i suggest you send a geotweet (see
http://apiwiki.twitter.com/Twitter-REST-API-Method%3A-statuses%C2%A0update),
and then do a search for
ok you wrote it, and maybe around Caracas there is no body using the
geo API, but i have my application listening for about one hour the
twitts near New York who have a very active twitter comunity (http://
search.twitter.com/search.atom?