Paragraph level feeds, as implemented in the Digress.it WordPress theme we were developing, are keyed by URLs of the form: http://writetoreply.org/legaldeposit/feed/paragraphlevel/annex-c-online-content-to-be-published/#56 That is: http://writetoreply.org/DOCNAME/feed/paragraphlevel/PAGENAME/#PARA_NUMBER So can you guess what I’m gonna do yet…? First of all, grab the search feed for a particular query on a particular document into a Yahoo Pipe: | source : ouseful.wordpress.com
The Google spreadsheet function =importHTM(“”,”table”,N) will scrape a table from an HMTL web page into a Google spreadsheet. The URL of the target web page, and the target table element both need to be in double quotes. The number N identifies the N’th table in the page (counting starts at 0) as the target table for data scraping. | source : ouseful.wordpress.com
One of the challenges I’ve set myself this year is to write some sort of book about Yahoo Pipes. Reading Presentation Zen three or four weeks ago, I started to imagine the form such a book might take. | source : ouseful.wordpress.com
In this post, I’ll refine that pattern a little more and show how to use delicious to bookmark a “processed” form of the output of the query, along with all the ingredients needed to generate that output. In a later post (hopefully before Christmas) I’ll try to show how the pattern can be used to share queries into other datastores, such as Google visualization API queries into a Google spreadsheet. | source : ouseful.wordpress.com
C’est ainsi qu’aurait pu s’intituler la conférence de Philippe Martin de la Fabrique de blogues lors du dernier webcom. En fait Philippe nous parlait de «lifestreaming», un terme barbare sans équivalent décent dans la langue de Molière. | source : www.rezopointzero.com
Yahoo Pipes by default uses Yahoo Maps, which is great when it comes to narratives. As you can see from the map below, each entry has a little arrow that let’s you navigate from marker to marker in a specific order. Each marker also has a number indicating it’s place in a sequence. This is nothing more than entries in a Google Calender with time/date stamps, geo info and a description, mapped automatically using Yahoo Pipes. | source : onlinejournalismblog.com
Here’s a pipe I’ve created that attempts to marshal the content from hyperlocal blogging in Birmingham and allow people only to subscribe to feeds that interest them. This is a piece of investigation and experimentation that I’ve been able to find the time to do thanks to Will Perrin and his hyperlocal blogging initiative Talk About Local. Will also helped define the reason why it would be useful to do — for what he called “lazy journalists”. | source : www.jonbounds.co.uk
Tarpipe is another pipes-style solution for remixing various content into one application or destination, but there are a few points of difference from competing solutions. While at its core, the Tarpipe solution is all about making mashups of various online services, you can also trigger processes by e-mail messages, instant messaging updates and third-party applications. You can also easily share your completed projects on sites such as Evernote, FriendFeed, Flickr and Twitter. | source : tarpipe.com