am sorry guys for this question its not related to any programming issue but there was someone who disturb me for a while on twitter actually for 7 month and i haven't blocked him until now cause i want to know who is he or she yes am a little bit curious so if he or she send me a direct message again on twitter can I then get his or her IP-Address after that can I know who is him specifically . I have been trying to know him for that long time but with no result so could anyone help me if yes I'll appreciate it and If no there is no problem and thanks
No, this is not possible.
Even if it were, there is no reliable way to link an IP address to a person.
Related
I've been playing with the reddit API and I'd really like to make a bot that listens for someone to tag it in a comment, and then responds with a comment.
I've been looking through the docs here but haven't found what I'm looking for.
I've seen other bots do this in the past so I feel it must be possible.
If someone could point me in the right direction I'd really appreciate it.
Cheers.
If you use PRAW (Python Reddit API Wrapper), then you can use the redditor.inbox class to track "mentions". http://praw.readthedocs.io/en/latest/code_overview/reddit/inbox.html?highlight=Mentions
Otherwise, AFAIK mentions are just another item in your inbox.
https://reddit.com/r/redditscripting
I am trying to build an app which acquired information from WiFi Access point, however, this information is not a standard information. i am transmitting additional information from the access point. Now to receive this information, i need to modify the class "WifiInfo." I am not sure how can I do it. I tried googling it, but no luck.
Is it possible to do this?
If yes, How,
Can I do this using any alternate way?
Thanks in advance for your help. :)
I need a Twitter widget that isn't chunky and disgusting like the official one (http://twitter.com/about/resources/widgets/widget_profile) and more like this one on some guy's blog (http://kelwynshade.blogspot.com/).
I've checked his source, obviously - and it appears to be part of the Google Friend Connect service, which seems like it aims to solve a lot of problems I just don't have. And by that I mean it's bloated as hell.
Please advise.
Okay, ultimately I determined that I had enough CSS control over the stock widget to make do. If anyone has a better solution though I'd still like to hear it.
I dont know if this helps but u can check the post to twitter app from here:
http://marakana.com/forums/android/examples/67.html
and here
http://marakana.com/techtv/android_bootcamp_screencast_series.html
Hope it helpes:)
I've been attempting to go over the Twitter API, albeit it has taken me a while and I'm being thrown back and forth between the old and the new site - however I was wondering if there is a date at all for when a user has decided to follow or; or if your able to tell when a user stopped following you?
I've been looking through here https://apiwiki.twitter.com/Twitter-API-Documentation to no avail, but I wondered if anyone knew of a way of doing it (outside of a separate monitoring system of course!)
Cheers,
Dan
The Twitter API doesn't explicitly provide dates for when a user started following you or stopped following you. This is something that you would need to monitor in some fashion.
Hope this post will not be killed on the ground of "NOT PROGRAMMING RELATED".
It seems everyone is flocking to URL shorten service recently. For some special sites like twitter, I am really OK with it.
However, I just wandering if I use that shorten URL in other place like PR, am I losing back links juicy? or are there any other down sides that I need to bear by using the shorten URL?
Many thanks to those who are enjoying closing posts for sparing my question!
Best regards to those who are reading, considering and answering my question!
Good holidays!
You definitely are losing SEO value. But yes, this isn't the best place to ask this question. I don't know where to send you, but maybe webmasterworld or something. They have forums.
Perhaps a little bit. You're sending traffic to the URL shortener first (and link juice) but then you get free click-through statistics (as with bit.ly) and, of course, the shortening effect.
If you don't need a shortener, make the links full.
Good luck!
The biggest question you have to ask yourself if you rely on an URL shortener that you don't run yourself: Who exactly are you relying on for working links into your web site?