From: Craig on 13 Jan 2010 13:49 Yup; Don't use it. Prolly won't. But, still, what I find compelling about this project is that it's designed to capture content that you've already created or discovered through a myriad of vehicles (e.g. twitter, flickr, rss, etc). Although blogging software bolts on this kind of functionality, Storytlr makes the "packaging" of them a lot more coherent. It's cross-platform & open-source, is written in php and requires an AMP environment. > Storytlr is an open source lifestreaming and micro blogging platform. > You can use it for a single user or it can act as a host for many > people all from the same installation. <http://code.google.com/p/storytlr/> Read about it via Ars: > I already put a lot of my life on the Internet, but I do so by using > a multitude of different popular Web applications. I keep pictures > of my robot cat on Flickr; meditations about what I ate for lunch go > on Twitter; my videos are on YouTube; and I use Digg, Delicious, > Tumblr, and many others. I want my personal website to bring all of > it together with a cohesive presentation and a format that I can > control. I don't want to have to populate my website with content�I > want it to be automatically populated with the content that I'm > already producing. <http://arstechnica.com/open-source/guides/2010/01/make-your-own-lifestream-with-open-source-software.ars> -- -Craig
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