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Me on Twitter

  • #GooglePlay policy has changed "Ads must not simulate or impersonate system notifications or warnings." Cool ! http://t.co/Pyp1RgSk 11 years 38 weeks ago
  • IOS leads over Android as far as which 1 will win in enterprise marketplace - according to Appcelerator's may report http://t.co/zytDfOEF 11 years 38 weeks ago
  • Cannot simply ignore a file that's already in SVN control. Never bothered looking why. Old tool SVN... http://t.co/dkKO3eiP 11 years 38 weeks ago
  • "Good grammar is credibility, especially on the internet. [...] They are a projection of you in your physical absence." http://t.co/mJv0dUtb 11 years 38 weeks ago
  • @TheBrousse ok. Chapeau bas ! Cc @CedN 11 years 39 weeks ago
  • @TheBrousse au fait on peut savoir ce que fera cette appli ? cc @CedN 11 years 39 weeks ago
  • Tonight's @ParisAndroidUG : apps gain permissions of other apps in the same process 11 years 39 weeks ago
  • @TheBrousse ok. Bon a savoir ! 11 years 39 weeks ago
  • @TheBrousse bien dormi ? :-) c'est fait avec les api android ou titanium ? 11 years 39 weeks ago
  • #AddThis widget in #Firefox3D : #Google+ has a bigger one ;-) http://t.co/3eISv0rv 11 years 39 weeks ago

drupal

drupal AddThis for Drupal

This small article might help you to figure out quickly how to work with the AddThis module for Drupal.
It is not a substitute to the original documentation : it just provides a concrete view of the configuration process from my experience.

Here is a sample "toolbox" generated with the AddThis module : AddThis : nicobo's sample toolbox

Here is an overview of the main steps to get AddThis working on Drupal :

  1. install the module : http://drupal.org/project/addthis
  2. choose in which nodes it appears : page, story, teasers, ...
  3. select which type of widget you want : they are called "button" and "toolbox" in the configure tab
  4. build the widget by adding components to it (only for "toolbox") : components includes popular buttons like facebook like, google +1, tweet, but also custom elements like separator, addthis 'more' button
  5. add a service customization for each component you listed : this step simply provides each component with adequate parameters
  6. customize it more using the numerous other options

[...]

drupal Displaying your tweets on your Drupal blog

If you want to display your latest tweets on your Drupal blog, you will probably want to use the dedicated Twitter module. Among other features, this module provides a new block type that lists a selection of tweets from an account. Tweets are retrieved via a cron job and stored in your website's database, making them available even through corporate firewalls that banish twitter.com. Just-what-you-need !

There are a few catches however : it will likely not work if you are on a shared host because Twitter puts rate limits to the usage of their API, and there is a bug in the block view that can be circumvented.

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