You can use Wireshark or any other packet sniffer to determine whether your
client is following redirects. I'm not sure what ruby twitter client you're
using, but if it's John Nunemaker's, I believe it does follow redirects.
Larry Wright/@larrywright

On Fri, Aug 7, 2009 at 2:03 PM, David Fisher <tib...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
> I can't be sure if my client is following redirects. Probably not. I'm
> just using the Ruby Twitter Gem which haven't been updated for a month
> or so I think
>
> dave
>
> On Aug 7, 1:15 pm, lucasnicolato <eternitya...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > im having the same problem. im just lucky my app is still in test.
> >
> > RT @twitter Due to defense measures some Twitter clients are unable to
> > communicate with our API, and many users are unable to tweet via SMS.
> >
> > I think we can only wait for twitter to normalize de api.
> >
> > On 7 ago, 12:20, diddy <david.barrowcl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > > Hi,
> >
> > > I use the Twitter search api, e.g: -
> >
> > >http://search.twitter.com/search.rss?q=iphone
> >
> > > and I now get: -
> >
> > > "You have been rate limited. Enhance your calm."
> >
> > > I rely on this for my application.  Anything I can do to stop it?
> >
> > > Thanks!




-- 
Larry Wright

Reply via email to