Earlier this month those clever folks at Happy Cog launched their new (and beautiful) blog, Cognition, in which they wholeheartedly embrace Twitter as their primary comment stream. As Jeffrey Zeldman says in his inaugural post:
Speaking of experiments, there’s our comments section. Everybody knows inline blog comments are going the way of the BBS and Gopher sites of yore. We’re not ready to say “comments are dead” (we’ll leave that for Wired Magazine’s next cover story) but we have noticed the smell, and we’re doing something about it.
Kids today are more likely to respond to a blog post on Twitter than in the article’s comments section; so we’ve collocated our comments on Twitter. Share a tweet-length response here, and, with your permission, it will go there. If you are moved to respond with more than 140 characters, post the response on your website, and it will show up here. Clever, these Americans.
Integrating Twitter comments isn’t new but they’ve taken it to a whole other level than I’ve seen done with EE before:
1. They are hooking into OAuth and passing the user back
2. They must be storing some Tweet data locally
I’m just a lowly front-end savvy chap for whom the mechanics of this are fairly opaque. But it seems clear to me that they gotta be pulling some data into EE from Twitter because Greg Storey’s inaugural tweet comment is now 11 days old and Matt Harris of Twitter tells us that:
At the moment the [search] index is ~5 days of relevant Tweets
Intrigued by this, I’ve asked some questions over on EE Insider but other things that happened last week are clearly occupying people’s thoughts more.
Can anyone shed any light on how those clever Coggers (Mark Huot in particular) are doing this?