OATP Twitter feed: Difference between revisions

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* If you don't want to sign up for anything, the easiest method is to go to the [http://tagteam.harvard.edu/remix/oatp/items HTML version]. It's organized like a blog, with the most recent items at the top. Bookmark it and revisit whenever you want to catch up.
* If you don't want to sign up for anything, the easiest method is to go to the [http://tagteam.harvard.edu/remix/oatp/items HTML version]. It's organized like a blog, with the most recent items at the top. Bookmark it and revisit whenever you want to catch up.


'''As a project, OATP only pushes the [[OATP_FAQ#What.27s_in_the_primary_project_feed.3F | primary]] feed to Twitter.'''
'''As a project, OATP only pushes the [[OATP_FAQ#What.27s_in_the_primary_project_feed.3F | ''primary'']] feed to Twitter.'''
* But if you think it would be useful, please feel free to use IFTTT, or another RSS-to-Twitter tool, to push other OATP feeds to Twitter.
* But if you think it would be useful, please feel free to use IFTTT, or another RSS-to-Twitter tool, to push other OATP feeds to Twitter.

Revision as of 13:25, 22 October 2020

You can follow the primary OATP Twitter feed at @oatp.

Note that the Twitter feed is abridged.

  • It's abridged against our will. It's abridged because the native OATP output is in RSS, and all the RSS-to-Twitter tools we've found truncate the feed.
  • Currently, we use IFTTT, which limits us to 25 tweets per day. That's a higher cap than any other tool we've found, but we'd still like to remove the cap.
  • On most days, we tag fewer than 25 items, and the Twitter feed is complete. But on heavy days we exceed 25, and the Twitter feed is incomplete.
  • This is annoying. But it helps to remember that hitting the cap is a side effect of success (success in covering OA comprehensively).

We welcome your help in identifying or creating an RSS-to-Twitter tool that does not abridge the Twitter feed.

Meantime consider one of the unabridged versions of the primary OATP feed.

  • The most popular unabridged version is the email version. (You can sign up here.) You'll receive one neatly-formatted email per day containing all the day's feed items.
  • If you don't want to sign up for anything, the easiest method is to go to the HTML version. It's organized like a blog, with the most recent items at the top. Bookmark it and revisit whenever you want to catch up.

As a project, OATP only pushes the primary feed to Twitter.

  • But if you think it would be useful, please feel free to use IFTTT, or another RSS-to-Twitter tool, to push other OATP feeds to Twitter.