Posts Tagged 'Twitter&'

Dec

18

FriendBinder

Posted by admin under internet, living, web2.0 - No Comments

FriendBinder is a social site allows you to keep track the updates of your friends from many social networking sites like Facebook, Flickr, Twitter, YouTube, etc. And you can also update your status messages to Facebook, Twitter, etc.

Apr

20

Share Your Twitter Photos By Twitgoo

Posted by admin under internet, living - No Comments

Twitgoo is an online photo sharing for Twitter that allows you to upload and share photos in your Twitter. All you need is to login with your Twitter account.

Twitgoo is similar to Twitpic, a similar service for twitter that I published before.

Mar

2

Schedule Your Twitter Tweets

Posted by admin under internet, living, resource - No Comments

Twuffer is another Twitter tools that allows you to schedule your tweets which means you make a list of tweets with the date and time you can want to post in your Twitter account, Twuffer will update for you. All you need is to login with your Twitter account.

Jan

28

Announcing Starling

Posted by admin under internet, media, news - No Comments

In various presentations throughout 2007, the Twitter team has made reference to a pure Ruby message queue server called Starling, written by our own Blaine Cook.

Starling is at the core of what we do at Twitter; it moves small messages around to daemons that work on jobs like processing updates, delivering messages, archiving user accounts, and so forth. An asynchronous messaging solution is becoming a necessity for big web applications, and Starling fits the particular needs we have at Twitter. It’s fast, it’s stable, it speaks the memcache protocol so it doesn’t need a new client library, and it’s disk-backed for persistence. When other parts of the Twitter site go down, Starling stays up. It’s a champ, and we love it.

Until now, Starling has lived a sheltered life in the Twitter code base. We’re happy to announce that Starling is now open source and freely available for anyone to use, modify, and improve. We’re eager to see patches and to start a proper open source community around Starling.

To give Starling a try today, just sudo gem install starling on your favorite Ruby development box. Let’s see some serious queues!(Twitter)