Scribkin, With Delicious FF and Twitter Infusion
Thursday, January 15th, 2009In the past week or two, I have been playing with a number of new toys that promise to tie the social networks Twitter and FriendFeed to my blog a little more tightly.
TweetSuite
First, there’s TweetSuite by Dan Zarrella. This is a err.. sweet little self-contained plugin that makes your WordPress blog aware of the Twitterverse. There are four main components that make up TweetSuite:
- A tweet this button that can be floated in the upper-left or upper-right portion of a blog post. Very similar to a Digg button.
- An area below the post that tracks tweets about the article and lists them, complete with the optional ability to include a re-tweet button next to them.
- Four fun Twitter-related widgets that can be dropped in the sidebar: Most, Recent, Last, and Favorite Tweets.
- Last but not least, TweetSuite will optionally update Twitter when a new entry is posted.
I am not so invested in Twitter that I can tell if TweetSuite is catching all the Twitter buzz surrounding my entries. It did detect one tweet on my last entry and a couple more on older posts.. but that’s one of the reasons I’m writing this post! To see if it works.
FF2Disqus
Second, I am using a cloud-based app called FriendFeed-to-Disqus (or FF2Disqus). This little utility is by Carter Rabasa, the guy who wrote Twitter2FF, a handy utility for synchronizing your Twitter and FriendFeed friends. Anyway, this web app isn’t a plugin, and in fact hooks in to FriendFeed and Disqus, so it isn’t specifically bound to WordPress blogs at all!
What it does is monitor a service on FriendFeed (say the RSS feed for your blog) and utilizes the Disqus API to push any new comments on the relevant entry in FriendFeed to your blog entry. So in effect what this does is bring the comment activity back in to your blog.
There have been a rash about this utility and the value that it brings to blogs and FriendFeed. I have to admit that I share a few reservations about deploying it full-time on my blog. But I decided, I would jump in with both feet and see how everything turns out. Hopefully, everything will be great.
Final Note
I have disabled Glenn Slaven’s excellent FriendFeed Comments plugin for the moment in order to avoid redundancy. But don’t think I don’t like it – far from it! If FF2Disqus doesn’t work out I’m going straight back to using this plugin!

