Best,
-------------- Edward H. Hotchkiss http://www.edwardhotchkiss.com/ http://www.twitter.com/edwardhotchkiss/ --------------
On Nov 17, 2010, at 3:25 PM, Ryan Sarver wrote:
Shannon, good questions -- answers inline below...On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 12:27 PM, Shannon Clark <[email protected] > wrote:Looking at Gnip's website they have the "contact us for pricing" links - will Twitter & Gnip be making the pricing for the various levels public?They will be published if they aren't already and they are being widely reported through RWW and other outlets. One of the main goal is transparencyWill companies that license the data be allowed to, in turn, sell services on top of that data - i.e. will this spark a new generation of products such as Scout Labs (now Lithium) or other analytics tools which are built by companies who have negotiated for full or partial firehose access but which are then used by clients of those companies each of whom will configuredifferent queries and searches to monitor?Companies can definitely build and sell products based on the analysis of the data. A major market for this move is the Social Media Monitoring (SMM) market and we expect that to grow.And on a more technical level will Gnip and Twitter work together to make the transition for developers who might start building/testing a tool using Twitter's free API's but then later migrate to Gnip's commercial feeds as seemless as possible? Will the API calls etc be similar (or identical butwith different URL's?)Gnip is offering an exact proxy of our API so that the payloads look the same. You would just need to change the endpoint you are pointing at and (I think) your credentials for accessing the endpointAnd a further query - you emphasize that this is for "non-display" services - does that mean, for example, that an analytics tool built using the newMentions feed from Gnip cannot display the underlying Tweets that arereturned by that feed? This would seem to severely limit the value and utility of such analytics to many businesses (who might want to reply to many of those messages, might want to follow people on Twitter discussing their company/brand/industry/competitors, and in almost all cases will want to view the full Tweet w/rich metadata not just a summarization of #s oftweets etc.)This is really about B2C vs B2B. We expect that the dashboard will want to show tweets and we support that, but it should be for a commercial audience that wouldn't be interested in running Twitter's promoted products. Let me know if that doesn't make sense.And/or would a business focused Twitter client - CoTweet, Hootsuite,Tweetdeck etc be able to offer (perhaps as part of a professional version) such enhanced Mentions feeds and display them within that application?This deal is all about elevated access. CoTweet and Hootsuite are able to operate on the freely available, basic APIs. If however, Hootsuite wanted to get larger volumes of data for analytics, they would want to reach out to Gnip. Hope that answers your questions. Best, Ryanthanks, Shannon(I'm not an active developer at the moment but I am consulting some businessclients on a range of social media tools and as analytics and theappropriate use of them is a core part of my recommendations I'm following these developments closely and look forward to I hope new competitors in theanalytics space soon) --------------------- Real Things - http://realthings.posterous.com/ Slow Brand - http://slowbrand.com Searching for the Moon - http://shannonclark.wordpress.com --------------------- cell: 1.510.333.0295 Twitter - rycautOn Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 10:09 AM, Ryan Sarver <[email protected]> wrote:Dewald, The basic levels of all of the streaming APIs -- Spritzer, Follow, Track -- will remain open, free and direct from us. Elevated levels for non-display use will be served through Gnip. Hope that answers the question. Best, Ryan On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 5:44 PM, Dewald Pretorius <[email protected]> wrote:Ryan, The Gnip blog post states:[QUOTE]Twitter Decahose. This volume-based product is comprised of 10%of the full firehose. Starting today, developers who want to accessthis sample rate will access it via Gnip instead of Twitter. Twitterwill also begin to transition non-display developers with existing Twitter Gardenhose access over to Gnip.[/QUOTE]How does this affect the basic statuses/sample method of the StreamingAPI? Are you discontinuing it? If so, when? -- Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi Issues/Enhancements Tracker: http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list Change your membership to this group: http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk-- Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi Issues/Enhancements Tracker: http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list Change your membership to this group: http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk-- Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi Issues/Enhancements Tracker: http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list Change your membership to this group: http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk-- Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi Issues/Enhancements Tracker: http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list Change your membership to this group: http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk
<<inline: edward.png>>
-- Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi Issues/Enhancements Tracker: http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list Change your membership to this group: http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk
