Filtering your facebook feeds

Here's a quick guide on creating your own filtered view of facebook status updates for your news reader.

I got an email from a friend of digitalkatie about facebook and twitter.  Apparently the constant stream of status updates via twitter into facebook is overwhelming his use of the facebook status RSS feed.  There is a nice solution using yahoo pipes without needing any real programming.

You might want to take a look at pipes.yahoo.com.  They provide a nice gui based

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process building tool which allows you to set up a chain of processes to take action on combinations of RSS feeds and web pages.

  1. Login using a yahoo id, create a new pipe.
  2. Copy the the address[1] of the facebook RSS feed into a new 'fetch feed' block. 
  3. Add a new  'filter block' and connect the fetch feed to the filter block by drawing a line between the bottom connector on the fetch and the top one on the filter block.
  4. You could enter some text in the filter block - choose to block ANY items with ' is twittering: ' in them.
  5. Now connect the bottom of the filter up to the 'pipe output' block. 
  6. Save and 'run feed' to view the results.  (No need to 'publish it' or to rename the feed)

Buttons on the results page will allow you to add it to My Yahoo, Google Reader or other feed readers using the orange RSS 'more options' link.

I'm using the filtered feed in Bloglines and finding it quite useful.  There is no point in seeing the same messages twice as I read twitter on my phone or on the website.

Going offline for travel with Window Mobile

Holidays always make me think about packing online media. It's a time to copy across working files, email, and new music to the laptop. I have become a bit of a fan of services which store data and make it accessible through a browser. * Google for email and calendar * del.icio.us for bookmarks * Bloglines for blog reading At home I can switch between desktop machines and mobile devices both at home and work and know that I will have access as long as I have a browser with an internet connection. Packing for holiday means that I might have to manage without. How can I prepare my windows mobile phone for the prospect of only having an intermittent connection? In theory Google Mail now has imap, a mail protocol designed with exactly this sort of scenario - keeping folders and emails on a sever in sync with an intermittently connected client. Unfortunately window mobile mail client isn't quite up to the job, and deals with imap slowly with timeouts. Fortunately WebIS have FlexMail 2007 which does the trick nicely. For blog reading I am using Egress by Karl Hessinger (GarishKernels). This picks up my subscription list and unread items from Bloglines. I've brought over calendar information using OggSync. And I am currently typing this using a commercial blog service Typepad, because of it's nice offline mobile client. And for some reassurance that the PCs at home and work will still work when we return, some backups were needed. Carbon Copy clones the complete Mac hard disk, and Cobain Backup to selectively backup the important bits on each of the windows boxes.

Tracking posts from many places using friendfeed

Ewan recently mentioned finding friendfeed useful, if occasionally overwhelmed by twitter posts. Usefully it does roll up multiple posts into one entry where appropriate. 

Friendfeed offers a nice way to provide a composite feed which summarises a list of when and where your friends have posted new content elsewhere on the web.   It is sort of like an outward facing Facebook newsfeed.  Instead of just providing a list of actions within the facebook service, this draws on any web2.0 services which you post. It can provide a composite list of what you or your friends have been up to and where they have been posting recently. There are so many places where people may be posting that it can be difficult to keep up, and spot and add new feeds for everyone. 

Bother, I had spent a long time programming and linking up a cunning sequence of yahoo pipes to do exactly this job


 

EDIT: fixed the link to my friend feed and also posted a new item about filtering facebook to remove twitter.  Wonder if this will help ewan's problem?

Twitter and other unwanted messages

It would be nice to have a bit more control over which messages are forwarded to my phone using twitter. Spam is fairy easy to avoid, but other kind of unwanted message come from a probem with twitter only having one stream of messages per user. 

I can see the use for clients like twhirl and other desktop clients to allow you to post and read in more flexible ways.  It would be nice to be able to do some more filtering and selecting online.  I can see an idea for an automated filter and repost tool, create a filtered or composite twitter feed to add to your friends to stay in touch if their usual feed is a bit busy.

It would be nice to be able to be a bit more selective about what you read and send using text messages. I find the text based interface the most useful one, but lacking in some selectivity.  You can follow or nofollow - that's it.  What if I want to follow everything except 'new blog post' twitters for example.  I hope paying for text message quotas may drive some development in this area.

It may be useful to look at other microblogging services like jaku, following their acquisition by google

Twitter, microblogs and spam

Enjoying being able to stay in touch while travelling (although trying to avoid the urge to download my work emails).  Bit of blogging, photos and twittering.

I'm really enjoying being able to post and track microblogs using twitter, sending small quick updates to people by web, text message and status messages. Kate seems to be having fun doing this too.

Also heard from Kal this morning that he has just finished his exams, and was waiting expectantly for answers - so we got in touch to cheer him up Tried to get Louis to giggle down the phone. Not sure what else he got back from the request for a distraction via twitter.

EDIT: Congratulations Kal on passing the exams

On the sighty more annoying side are the start of the spam twitter accounts. An account called googlenoticias started following lots of people yesterday.  Of course the spamming only works if I reciprocate and choose to follow it in return. Mildly irritating.

Also previously have had a more targeted approach from companies using Twitter.  One of which was writing about and promoting training 'courses' for schools including brain gym!

On the other hand, seeing how twitter can be used socially in zefrank's colorwars has reminded me how much more fun it is to use it socially.  (On our way down to centreparks we joined in playing Bingo over twitter - Kate for c0ff00team and myself for redteam.  Colo(u)r wars has already divided the family.

It really seems that twitter is more interesting when used as part of a conversation rather then just a one way stream of consciousness.  Ask a question, or comment back to someone.  It's much more than just a way to update your Facebook status.