Durl: URL search for delicious
Ulises commented on one of Michael’s idea to use del.icio.us to track his discussions spread about the web on forums, blogs, etc. Ulises pointed out that searching for urls on delicious was impossible. Well, I (didn’t) have some free time, so I coded up durl to do just that. You can also subscribe to an RSS feed of the latest comments per URL.




making the “long tail” longer.
or better. or something. I think you guys should check this out. http://www.fullcirc.com/weblog/2004/11/neighbornode.htm What do you see? A blog entry with a bunch of comments. Not so special. However, what is interesting is the timing of the comments …
Trackback by mtl3p — 2004/12/20 @ 20:37
DURL: who bookmarks what
Robin, a bilingual blogger, has invented DURL. You enter a url to retrieve information about people who delicious’ed it.
Excellent idea! One addition that I think could expand the capabilities of DURL or of the URL features of del.icio.us would be th…
Trackback by LuistxoBlog — 2004/12/22 @ 05:56
Why is del.icio.us do delicious?
Content Management Systems (CMSs) help create identity, community and collaboration, and Rich Site Summary (RSS) automates and fosters communication within and between these identities and communities. If CMS-based websites are like silos of knowledge
Trackback by omarzblog.gnuvernment.org — 2004/12/23 @ 17:18
why not just do del.icio.us/url?url= ? i guess it doesnt give you an rss feed.. but if you are the type of person who continually checks the feed of a single url on delicious then you seriously need help
Comment by james — 2004/12/25 @ 15:02
IM2 | OQP » Durl: URL search for delicious…
Trackback by randomWalks flux — 2004/12/25 @ 23:34
誰del.icio.usäº?æ??ï¼?
å?¯è?½æ??å??ç¶?常é?½æ?³ç?¥é??誰å°?è?ªå·±ç??ç¶²é ?æ?¶è??å?°del.icio.usä¹?å?§ã??DURLå°±è®?æ??å??æ?¥è©¢ç?¹å®?URLå?¨del.icio.usæ?¶è??ç??æ??æ³?ã??å®?æ?´æ??ä¾?RSS Feedï¼?好è®?æ??å??å?¯ä»¥å»ºç«?ä¸?å??del.icio.us watchlistï¼?é??é??News Readerç??ç??æ??å??å?¨…
Trackback by Jan's Tech Blog — 2004/12/26 @ 14:41
Bookmarklets for DURL and for directly using the delicious search.
Comment by Ankit — 2004/12/28 @ 04:25
Durl – Search Tool del.icio.us; Tool Bar
Via OLDaily -> Roland Piquepaille’s Technology Trends:
Durl a wonderful Search Tool for del.icio.us written by Robin Millette.
Put it into your Tool Bar: drag-and-drop -
del.icio.us’ Durl
Trackback by eLearning Timsoft — 2004/12/28 @ 04:43
Thanks for this really usefull tool Robin.
Are you going to release the Durl’s source code ?
Comment by Pierre-Jean Coudert — 2004/12/28 @ 08:17
Durl Shows You Who’s Linking in Del.icio.us
Hat tip to Steven for the pointer to Durl, at http://tools.waglo.com/durl . Durl shows you everyone who’s linking in del.icio.us to a particular URL (a specific URL, not a domain)….
Trackback by ResearchBuzz — 2004/12/28 @ 21:12
Along comes Durl: URL search for delicious
Durl: an RSS feed for del.icio.us URL queries.
Whoa! 185 other del.icio.us users had already snagged this one.
More information about Durl.
On my first test results page was a Furl link to a list of other social bookmarking services…
(via…
Trackback by Sen No Sen — 2004/12/29 @ 11:01
del.icio.us backlink feeds
First there was the tasty del.icio.us URL lookup bookmarklet .
Trackback by Seb's Open Research — 2004/12/29 @ 16:44
Durl released as public domain source code
I learned a few things this week about timing, simplicity and popularity. It all begun with a simple script called Durl I introduced 2004/12/20. It gained enough popularity to show up on http://del.icio.us/popular/ and now stands at about 200 links poi…
Trackback by IM2 | OQP — 2004/12/30 @ 06:24
DURL has problems with sites that do not contain www in their url.
example DURL will translate: http://radio.weblogs.com/0170233/ to
http://www.radio.weblogs.com/0107233/
This means DURL does not track many sites correctly.
too bad! It’s a great idea!
Comment by reader — 2005/01/02 @ 15:54
Hmm, I’m not actually tracking anything, that’s del.icio.us’s job. When you request something that isn’t found, only then do I offer the user a few variations on the URL given, such as prefixing with “www.”, removing session id crud, etc. There’s a remaining problem if a URL contains a fragment (marked by #) but that will be fixed shortly.
Comment by Robin — 2005/01/03 @ 01:41