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How to Write a Twitter Bot – Step by Step
ReplyDeleteStep A: Setup a Twitter App (screenshot)
Create a new account at Twitter that will become the bot. Then go to dev.twitter.com, sign-in with your new Twitter account and create a Twitter app. Give your app a name, description, website (any URL) and callback URL (https://spreadsheets.google.com/macros/). Agree to the terms, fill in the CAPTCHA and submit the form to create your first Twitter application.
Once the Twitter app has been created, click the Settings tab and choose Read and Write under Application Type. This is important since we want the bot to read tweets as well as post tweets. Click the Update button to save your changes.
Switch to the OAuth tool tab and make note of the Consumer Key and Consumer Secret. We will need these later in our Google Apps Script.
Step B: Create a Wolfram Alpha App (screenshot)
While the Twitter app will monitor and respond to tweets, the Wolfram App will be used to determine answers that users will be posing to your Twitter bot.
Go to developer.wolfram.com, create an account and then choose “Get an App ID” to create your new app. [See update below]
We will need this App ID in the Google Script. Remember that your free Wolfram Alpha App can only be used for a non-commercial purpose.
Update [3/19/2013] – If you need to create a Twitter bot with Wolfram|Alpha, you should send an email to businessdevelopment@wolframalpha.com to discuss licensing. The @DearAssistant Twitter bot has permission from Wolfram to run 2,000 queries per month.
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ReplyDeleteHow to Write a Twitter Bot – Step by Step
ReplyDeleteStep A: Setup a Twitter App (screenshot)
Create a new account at Twitter that will become the bot. Then go to dev.twitter.com, sign-in with your new Twitter account and create a Twitter app. Give your app a name, description, website (any URL) and callback URL (https://spreadsheets.google.com/macros/). Agree to the terms, fill in the CAPTCHA and submit the form to create your first Twitter application.
Once the Twitter app has been created, click the Settings tab and choose Read and Write under Application Type. This is important since we want the bot to read tweets as well as post tweets. Click the Update button to save your changes.
Switch to the OAuth tool tab and make note of the Consumer Key and Consumer Secret. We will need these later in our Google Apps Script.
Step B: Create a Wolfram Alpha App (screenshot)
While the Twitter app will monitor and respond to tweets, the Wolfram App will be used to determine answers that users will be posing to your Twitter bot.
Go to developer.wolfram.com, create an account and then choose “Get an App ID” to create your new app. [See update below]
We will need this App ID in the Google Script. Remember that your free Wolfram Alpha App can only be used for a non-commercial purpose.
Update [3/19/2013] – If you need to create a Twitter bot with Wolfram|Alpha, you should send an email to businessdevelopment@wolframalpha.com to discuss licensing. The @DearAssistant Twitter bot has permission from Wolfram to run 2,000 queries per month.
The web page has to download additional ~400 kB of resources (CSS, JavaSript and Image files) for rendering the video player alone and these extra resources will download even if the site visitor has chosen not to watch the embedded YouTube video.
ReplyDeleteThis can be a problem for two reasons. Once, we are indirectly adding extra weight (nearly 0.4 MB) to our pages and second, the visitor’s browser has to make multiple HTTP requests to render the video player. Both these factors will increase the overall loading time of your page and can possibly affect the page speed score as well.
Solution: Load the YouTube Video Player On-Demand
Google Plus uses a clever workaround to reduce the time it takes to initially load the YouTube video player and we can easily incorporate that approach on our sites as well.
Instead of embedding the full Youtube video player, Google+ only displays the thumbnail of a YouTube video and then overlays a play icon over the video so the image resembles a video player. Take a look at this sample video embedded below (or on Google Plus).
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ReplyDelete