Archive for the ‘yahoo’ tag
Scrobbling my BBC Radio listening on Last.fm
A couple of months ago I’d heard that the BBC Radio Labs had developed a desktop widget that scrobbled the songs you listen to on BBC Radio (currently only available for Radio 1, Radio 2, 6 Music and 1 Xtra) [via Last.fm]
I’m not a big fan of gimmicky desktop widgets - it’s bad enough that Vista comes with them as default - some people love them, some hate them… I just prefer less clutter on my desktop!
The other day I was listening to a lot of Radio 1… to which I thought it would be nice to have these songs scrobbled on my Last.fm profile. So I bit the bullet and downloaded Yahoo! Widgets and the BBC Radio + Last.fm widget. (OS X widget is also available)
So far I’ve been fairly impressed with the way it works. That is, once I’d hidden all the gimmicky widgets - yes I already have a clock in my taskbar; the weather outside is cold and wet… I know this already, this is England after all!
Traffic Updates: RSS -> SMS
Since moving down to Bristol, I have been subscribing to the Underscore mailing list - of which I’m guilty of non-participation. One of the threads today made me realise the potential of user empowerment using “Web 2.0″ services and technologies.
The thread was called “RSS -> SMS“, Andy wrote:
After my wife took three hours to get to work this morning due to the M5 being shut, I’ve built a Yahoo pipe that takes the Highways Agency feed and filters it to be just the M5 traffic alerts.
I can set up the RSS reader on her phone to cosume the feed from the pipe but was wondering if anyone knew a simple and free way of converting the feed to text messages sent to he phone? (It’ll only be for a low volume of messages (less than one a day))
The suggestion of Twitter’s SMS notifications was made, utilising the (very good) twitterfeed service, (which I used for both RSB and BLB tweets).
The UK Traffic information is provided by the Highways Agency in RSS format - which was routed through Yahoo Pipes to filter items containing information about the M5.
It was later found out that there is already a dedicated RSS feed for the M5, thus making the Yahoo Pipes method redundant. However the issue here isn’t about the range of RSS feeds and knowing what do with them… it’s about everyday people using openly available data to provide useful personalised information.
Sure, it’s mostly web-savvy developers doing this at the moment - yet as the web technologies evolve, we’ll start to see more personalised services that anyone can use.
If you want to follow the M5 Traffic Information on Twitter, visit: http://twitter.com/UK_M5_Traffic


