Showing posts with label Updates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Updates. Show all posts
How to post your Google Buzz updates on Twitter automatically

How to post your Google Buzz updates on Twitter automatically

The 140 characters on Twitter are often not enough for science and medical news. Google Buzz does not have a low-number character limit, hence I am channeling the updates from Buzz to Twitter.

This is how to automatically post your Google Buzz updates on Twitter:

1. Go to your Google profile/Buzz and copy the RSS feed - click the orange icon in the browser address bar.

2. Paste the RSS feed in FeedBurner and "burn" a new feed.

3. Activate the "Socialize" function to Twitter. You must already have a Twitter account that you link to FeedBurner. Click "Publicize" tab at the top and then select "Socialize" from the left sidebar.

5. Choose "Body only" (not "Title") in the "Formatting Options" of the FeedBurner feed.

That's all. All your Google Buzz updates will be now posted on Twitter automatically.

You can find more detailed instructions here:
http://buzzusers.com/showthread.php?62-How-to-Publish-your-Buzz-to-Twitter

Comments:

Arin Basu - Nice suggestions.

I have noted that if you set up to autopost buzz to twitter this way and twitter is connected to buzz in your links area of the google buzz profile, then your buzz as tweets show up in Buzz and then get fed again as tweets (sort of a loop that keeps on going between twitter and buzz). One way to get rid of this is to remove the twitter link from buzz. However, if you then like to bring in your (and favourite ones from other people you follow) tweets into buzz, you cannot do that.

I like to link my twitter and my buzz together. One other thing I do to send my buzzes (and favourite/interesting buzzes) to twitter is to open the comment link, choose the material to email to my posterous (http://www.posterous.com) account. This allows me to send longer pieces as shortened urls to twitter (it maintains a copy on my posterous for occasional review of interesting links for work). I have linked my posterous with twitter, so one post to posterous (public view) allows me to post to twitter as well. However, it is not autopost.

For twitter to buzz is usually by way of retweets that show up in my buzz box.
I think buzz+gmail can be very conveniently used as a central hub of almost all incoming/outflowing communication (RSS, tweets, facebook updates, emails from other people and non-gmail accounts). Buzz with online document storage, & using services like posterous, also saves on bandwidth & data storage, and avoid unnecessary duplication.

Arin Basu - For buzz >> posterous >> twitter connection to work (corrected version),

1) you will need to post to posterous from your gmail account (presumably that has buzz on it).
2) You can just use posterous and simultaneously post to both buzz and twitter if your posterous account is also connected to buzz. To link your posterous account to buzz, do:
a) Add the following to the posterous "bio" section:
Your Name, etc
b) Then add your posterous URL to your google profile and click add
c) Next time when Google spiders your posterous account, hopefully it will add your posterous to your buzz profile and then you are all set
d) check your google buzz profile connected sites and add the posterous site if you want

3) There are a couple of ways to do that:
1) (long way): create a buzz post, then use the comments section to email the buzz post to twitter AT posterous dot com (remember again, your posterous and gmail must be the same)
2) Shorter way (if you have configured your twitter to connect to buzz as well): just send an email to twitter AT posterous dot com; the mail will appear at both buzz and twitter

A point to remember is: using buzz@gmail.com will send only your subject line to buzz.

There are many other ways to channel, pretty much using similar processes. These are quite flexible.

Updated: 02/17/2010
Updates in Pediatrics

Updates in Pediatrics

You can find this information on PubMed but this is a nice summary from UpToDate (only brief highlights are posted below, check the source link for full text):

Sexually transmitted infections

25% of urban adolescent females (14-17 years of age) were diagnosed with a sexually transmitted infection (STI) within one year of first intercourse.

Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)

ECG screening should not be required before initiating stimulant therapy for patients with ADHD.

Autism prevalence

The prevalence of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) among eight-year-old children in the United States increased from 1 in 150 children in 2000 to 2002 to approximately 1 in 111 in 2006. No clear reason for increase has been found.

The choking game

5.7% of eighth-graders had participated in the self-strangulation activity known as "the choking game". Recognize signs of these activities: bruising or red marks on the neck; wearing high-necked shirts, even in warm weather; bloodshot eyes or pinpoint bruising around the eyes; petechiae on the face, especially the eyelids or conjunctiva.

HPV vaccine

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the use of quadrivalent human papillomavirus vaccine in males aged 9 through 26 years to reduce their likelihood of acquiring genital warts.

13-valent PCV

The FDA approved a 13-valentpneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13). PCV13 adds serotypes 1, 3, 5, 6A, 7F, and 19A to those contained in the PCV7, the 7-valent vaccine (4, 6B, 9V, 14, 18C, 19F, and 23F). The six additional serotypes accounted for 63% of invasive pneumococcal disease among children younger than five years of age.

References:
What's new in pediatrics. UpToDate.
Pediatrics and Medicine
Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.