Hi Reinier,
Are you referring to the tracked direct messages, which are formatted
like this: '(username):message' ?
if you want to collect additional data about the tracked messages you
still need to check the specific '(username)'-info by means of using
the regular Twitter-API.
in other words:
The XMPP is providing you the additional functionality to track
keywords or even receive the complete public timeline, but the API is
still in place whenever you need to get additional contextual user-
information.
gr. Roelandp
On 10 mei, 18:49, Reinier Zwitserloot <
reini...@gmail.com> wrote:
> D'oh - my mistake. It only tracks tweets with the keyword in it sent
> from accounts with a profile image. I was tweeting from a test account
> which didn't have one until I thought of that.
>
> Now my only question is how to turn the extremely scarce info sent in
> the XML packet over XMPP when receiving a direct message into
> something that's more useful for an API programmer.
>
> On May 10, 4:43 pm, "Steve Brunton" <
sbrun...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Sat, May 10, 2008 at 9:54 AM, Reinier Zwitserloot <
reini...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > I tried to 'tracktipit' and I even get confirmation that I am now
> > > tracking 'tipit', but this is not actually the case. If I send a tweet
> > > 'tipit tweet test' from a non-friend, I don't see on the web, I don't
> > > see it on my device. Is 5 letters too short? Does it only work for
> > > #tag?
>
> > cnntrack is tracking 'cnn' and it gets all kinds of Tweets that
> > contain just those three letters so I don't think that five letters is
> > to short. I just checked the web side of things for that account and
> > there isn't anything there, so tracks won't show up on the web side of
> > things. I'm getting all thetrackmessages through XMPP/IM. I'm not in