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Seems like we should federate our efforts somehow
We use a specific format to make it easier to pick up the the name of the wine and your score (we use the same approach on SMS/Jaiku/Pownce too). Archiving, categorising, relating and searching becomes so much easier then. Using hashtags for the varietal is a great idea. I'll start doing that myself from now on.
I wanted to aggregate food tweets for a site a friend of mine runs (www.foodgps.com) similarly to how you're doing it for wine so that we can send mini reviews to each other and feed it to foodgps. I've never setup and sort of twitter bot / group, so I was wondering if you could let me know how you did this? Any advice is greatly appreciated. Joseph
"
This is the June 4th edition of the Linux Journal Weekly News Notes.
Welcome!
This week Linux Journalers (Journalonians? Journalites?) got introduced and sucked in to the world of Plurk, http://www.plurk.com -- you can find us there via userid "linuxjournal". Plurk is where Twitter folks fed up with the site's excessive down-time have revolted to. If you stop by to check it out, make sure to say hi to us so we can add you as a friend.
Now on to the good stuff...
"
just thought you might need to know.....
Seriously, this is awesome idea and let me share a quick experience here.
I bought a case of wine recently based on new Gary Vaynerchuck's book: http://www.amazon.com/Gary-Vaynerchuks-101-Wine... and I tried 6 wines so far. (I am blogging each wine experience on my Tumblr blog: http://alexiskold.tumblr.com). So far, 5 out of 6 wines where amazing.
Here is what blew me away. None of the wines was > $20 yet, most of them where huge in terms of taste. Bottom line is that there are amazing wines out there that do not cost a fortune. Using Twitter to collaboratively discover them would be fantastic.
So I hope that folks will focus on amazing and affordable wines on winetweets. I am looking forward to that!
But Fred's Chateau Ducru is probably more than $20!
@whitneymcn and @raster are the makers of the code that's used to create these things.
Nycfood is live now too, another twitterbot.
If anyone is interested... I'm going to put up a twitter bot info site later today called www.twitterbotting.com. We'll try to put all the info we can there so other folks can make twitterbots.
I know it's not much of a burden ( just one extra character and the knowldege of how to use the # sign), but it still just irks me that the engineers are passing this work onto the end user.
Thoughts anyone?
The goal is to have a page on an archive site for each varietal. The hashtag should allow us to have the pages created on-the-fly for each/any varietal.
Also the site should be able to pull out each user's suggestions and create one page per user.
Plus it'll be mobile so if you're at the wine store you can pull out your bberry or iphone.
To me, the whole beauty of Twitter is how natural it is and how little effort it requires. This is also why I think a service like Summize is so valuable. I don't (and I suspect many people don't) want to go to niche sites to review restaurants, music, wine, scotch, cars, etc. I just want to tell my friends when I taste a scotch that I like, and I can do this on Twitter. Summize is great because their engineering team has taken on the burden of parsing and understanding all the conversations about wine / restaurants / etc on Twitter and making these conversations searchable and useful. In my opinion, Summize (or something like it) will replace sites that require more work or dedication from users like yelp and citysearch. (Notice, too, the local search that Summize recently added: http://summize.com/search?q=+restaurant+near%3A... . I've talked with Summize guys about this point and they totally get it. I'm sure we'll see even more useful views of the data from twitter there soon.)
As I'm writing this, I'm thinking even winetweets is asking a lot from users--why even make me type @winetweets at all? Just enter the finite number of varietals into a database and use the Twitter API to pull and index all tweets that mention these varietals or the word "wine" and come up with an algorithm to spit the relevant ones back onto the wintetweets twitter page. That's how a real engineer would solve this problem.
Granted, the concept of winetweets and creating a micro-group on Twitter is cool because it can be accomplished without any technical expertise, but if you're going to go so far as to build a twitter-bot, you might as well do it right.
--
Def like the idea of viewing this data via mobile at the wine store, btw. That's probably the number one place I would want to see this info.
"But there are a finite, relatively small number of varietals."
Youre kidding right?
OR
You only drink CA wine, and a little Bordeaux whe nyou have some extra £££...
Were I am, there are a half-dozen varieties you dont find 66 miles from where I sit, and the same goes for the grapes grown 66 miles away...
a million varietals (I'm no expert), I would guess the number of
popular varietals is still relatively "small" and isn't on the order
of millions.
The Paolo Bea Sagrantino Di Montefalco Secco Pagliaro wine you linked to in the main post isnt listed for sale anymore, but is still available at some other stores.
Create a snooth account, link it to twitter once. Post review on snooth, a snippet and a tinylink then gets posted to your twitter account with "@winetweets" so it posts there too. The link will then take people to snooth where they can look at neighbours, recommendations or stores selling that wine etc.
thanks --philip
The tweet looks like this: http://twitter.com/SnoothPhilip/statuses/827962254
Thanks for the idea!
I just joined Snooth and it's a wonderful service.
What about twitter integration the other way?
If I @winetweet a wine, it goes into ³my wines² on snooth
I often am at a restaurant and have a wonderful wine, I can see twittering
it at that moment
I doubt I'll remember to go home and log in to snooth and add it later
fred
Its possible, but somewhat messy. It plays to the unstructured data issue that adaptive blue and many others are trying to solve. Our data is structured, twitters isnt. We could watch @winetweets and scrape new entries, then parse them looking for keywords and then match them to our master wine records on the fly, but it wouldnt be flawless.
We do things like this, and its not too hard when you are looking for single phrase matches, eg. blog posts about Napa, but the hit rate drops as you start looking at text strings. It it worked flawlessly we'd just use google's "i feel lucky" rather than bother to manually select which result is best.
So, its possible, but messy, but we are building more auto-tagging tools to help populate some new parts of the site we'll be launching in a few weeks. Think of these pages as google alerts meets facebooks wall feature for every winery, grape and region. If that works ok, then i'd say we're ready to do reverse twitter integration based off identifying content from within unstructured text blocks.
--philip
Cheers,
Natalie
www.nataliemaclean.com
Editor of Nat Decants Wine Newsletter
Author of Red, White and Drunk All Over