I mean, you could update with cron and then read the timeline with -U, does anybody do that?
I mean, you could update with cron and then read the timeline with -U, does anybody do that?
@nblade@nblade.sdf.org: Check my tw.txt file. The specification does not allow a comment. Iâve added this now: 1970-01-01T01:00:00.000000Zâ¸FF:https://codevoid.de/tw.following.txt. Iâd use the special date/time + FF: comment as trigger. This is backwards compatible and shouldnât really come up in anyonesâ timeline.
Haunted by a phantom timeline - YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNHW4_R_xI8
/me has to switch off showing the timeline after tweeting with #goxtxt as it takes 2 minutes to fetch it đł. Too long if you have a message split into two tweets.
@71m@timmorgan.org If your nick is mentioned with @ (i forgot yesterday, sorry) most clients should highlight it in your timeline if you are following the person mentioning you.
Bad idea of the day: an irc-style chat interface for mastodon, where whatever you type is posted & you just see your home timeline
Parsing timeline v3: https://jeffreykegler.github.io/personal/timeline_v3
@benaiah@benaiah.me thx for tw. Very useful, but for tt I just used âtwtxt timelineâ, increased âlimit_timelineâ and activated âuse_pagerâ in config.
Josh Millard - Keeping Web Communities Healthy in a Dark Timeline - DonutJS October 2017 - YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qhun8OzAmfg
Sanity on the Weird Timeline https://www.ribbonfarm.com/2017/03/14/maintaining-sanity-weird-timeline/
@reednj@twtxt.xyz I think we are all using an client to read our timeline, but i somtimes use http://twtxt.xyz/ to read on the go.
@reednj@twtxt.xyz I think we are all using an client to read our timeline, but i somtimes use http://twtxt.xyz/ to read on the go.
#txtnish supports exporting your timeline to html with âtheme html since last night. See https://domgoergen.com/twtxt/timeline.html for an example.
#txtnish supports exporting your timeline to html with âtheme html since last night. See https://domgoergen.com/twtxt/timeline.html for an example.
It doesnât do anything interesting, handles no redirects, prints the ugliest timeline and you have to configure it by editing the source file. But it kinda worksâŚ
It doesnât do anything interesting, handles no redirects, prints the ugliest timeline and you have to configure it by editing the source file. But it kinda worksâŚ
@phil@philmcclure.duckdns.org, i mostly check @freemor@freemor.homelinux.net timeline. Less bots. How often do you update, @freemor@freemor.homelinux.net?
@phil@philmcclure.duckdns.org, i mostly check @freemor@freemor.homelinux.net timeline. Less bots. How often do you update, @freemor@freemor.homelinux.net?
@freemor@freemor.homelinux.net Or we resort the timline to have the newest entries on top, then you could just request the first x bytes of every feed. But archiving is definitly the pragmatic solution. Get back to me if you want to have that in txtnish. Or maybe someone want to submit a PR?
@freemor@freemor.homelinux.net Or we resort the timline to have the newest entries on top, then you could just request the first x bytes of every feed. But archiving is definitly the pragmatic solution. Get back to me if you want to have that in txtnish. Or maybe someone want to submit a PR?
@tx@0x1A4.1337.cx I like the visualization of the timeline. A static timeline of we-are-twtxt would be cool!
@tx@0x1A4.1337.cx I like the visualization of the timeline. A static timeline of we-are-twtxt would be cool!
Meet the firehose at https://domgoergen.com/twtxt/firehose.txt. It publishes the complete timeline of we-are-twtxt every ten minutes. Iâll use it for my bots, so i donât have to hit your feeds so often. Feel free to use it too!
Meet the firehose at https://domgoergen.com/twtxt/firehose.txt. It publishes the complete timeline of we-are-twtxt every ten minutes. Iâll use it for my bots, so i donât have to hit your feeds so often. Feel free to use it too!
#txtnish now requests gzipped pages if possible and you can call timeline with a single url to view the twtfile of someone you donât follow.
#txtnish now requests gzipped pages if possible and you can call timeline with a single url to view the twtfile of someone you donât follow.
@freemor@freemor.homelinux.net Thanks for the reference! How do you create your timeline? Would it help if you had access to the unformatted timeline? Before formatting itâs nick âtâ url âtâ props âtâ unixtime âtâ msg
@freemor@freemor.homelinux.net Thanks for the reference! How do you create your timeline? Would it help if you had access to the unformatted timeline? Before formatting itâs nick âtâ url âtâ props âtâ unixtime âtâ msg
How should #txtnish handle permanent redirects? Prompt the user to change url? But what if timeline is run in cron? A flag like -I for non-interactive? MhhâŚ
How should #txtnish handle permanent redirects? Prompt the user to change url? But what if timeline is run in cron? A flag like -I for non-interactive? MhhâŚ
#txtnish has a reply subcommand that opens a editor with your outcommented timeline. Every non empty, not commented line will be tweeted.
#txtnish has a reply subcommand that opens a editor with your outcommented timeline. Every non empty, not commented line will be tweeted.
How to use #txtnix with tor: HTTPS_PROXY=socks://localhost:9050 txtnix timeline Or use the new variables http_proxy and https_proxy
How to use #txtnix with tor: HTTPS_PROXY=socks://localhost:9050 txtnix timeline Or use the new variables http_proxy and https_proxy
And thereâs ânew to just show the new tweets since the last time you called timeline.
#txtnix now has a âpretty and âsimple for the timeline and view subcommands and a config option display_format that defaults to simple.
And thereâs ânew to just show the new tweets since the last time you called timeline.
#txtnix now has a âpretty and âsimple for the timeline and view subcommands and a config option display_format that defaults to simple.
This could be a way to discover other twtxt users more easily. Clients could ignore such lines in the timeline if wanted.
This could be a way to discover other twtxt users more easily. Clients could ignore such lines in the timeline if wanted.
Damn, before leaving work, my timeline was quite slow. Now, displaying the latest 50 messages isnât enough :o
twtxt-able twtxt helper scripts, part 1: make âttâ run âtwtxt timeline -l 1000 | lessâ