Jump to Navigation

Me on Twitter

  • @CyrilGRV thx je viens d'installer 9 years 48 weeks ago
  • Hello @CyrilGRV il t'en reste une ? 9 years 48 weeks ago
  • Hands on #android5 today. Colorful GUI, fluid animations, some strange ergonomics and... my app #SwitchDataSwitch broken :-( 9 years 49 weeks ago
  • RT @jeanhelou: Your developers aren't slow https://t.co/gfPXzqlQCM 9 years 49 weeks ago
  • #PayPal terms of use updated again... 8 pages of small characters... Any digest around ? 9 years 49 weeks ago
  • Web fundamentals by #Google - Great digest of most of #web20 issues & solutions https://t.co/xT3u0JMcRc 9 years 50 weeks ago
  • #FirefoxDeveloperEdition : Got to try this "WebIDE" http://t.co/92JwCporGr 9 years 50 weeks ago
  • "Great products win". No... Can't be... http://t.co/lvadzWKLjA 10 years 2 days ago
  • SPDX License List - standardized licenses identifiers. Very useful for #nodejs #maven #ivy ... https://t.co/RxnDgfZTGH 10 years 2 weeks ago
  • @dgfip_officiel Mon smartphone devient fou avec 3 QRCodes côte à côte... http://t.co/SZsaecUXig 10 years 2 weeks ago

twitter rate limit

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.

Syndicate content