My buddy from Top SEO Consultants asked me to whip up a wordpress plugin to throw tweetmeme’s “retweet this” button into posts with options to position the button.
It’s in Dev Projects.
I just noticed that spell-check is flagging the terms “SEO”, “WordPress”, and “plugin”. You’d think they’d be commonplace enough by now that they’d be included in those dictionaries by default.
Anyway, the plugin is here: Tweetmeme Retweet Button.
Want to share images on twitter with your own host? There’s already a lot of services out there for hosting your images, and there are some services that will automatically send a tweet for your uploaded image via twitter as well. But I have my own domain, my own hosting, and I’d like to keep my images here.
Today was a very lazy sunday, but I managed to get a little something accomplished. Check out the Development Projects section and download my single-file script that lets you upload an image and automatically send a tweet to it, or just Download Here. It’s very basic, and now that I think about it, really open to abuse, because anyone with a valid twitter username and password can use it. I guess if anyone actually uses it, or I get bored enough again, I’ll add some more features like URL-shortening services or more security. Right now, the length of your message is limited by the length of your domain name and the directory the script resides in.
You can see (and use, I’ll leave it up until it starts getting abused) a live demo here: Image Upload and Tweet. Let me know if you find any bugs, please!
If you’re reading this you probably, at some point in your life, wanted to post an image on the internet. A forum, your myspace, whatever. While you can always sign up for Imageshack or Twitpic or just upload them to one of the billion other places you can, sometimes it’s nice to have something easier. That’s why I made the script for my image hosting. Just go, upload, click bam boom easy. No logging in, no thumbnails, no nothing.
Anyway, blah blah blah, here’s the cleaned up source code:
Easy PHP Image Hosting Script
I took out the random image generator, because that uses mysql to store the array of images to randomly cycle through. This is 100% standalone, it’s easy, and it works. Well, it works for me. There you go.