![]() I have tried to do something similar for my Power Mac Cube with Mac OS X Tiger, using WebDesktop instead of Fluid (which doesn’t work under Tiger), but for some reason the TweetDeck Web interface didn’t load, so at the moment I’m using Dabr in a browser window.What a time we live in when such wisdom is shared so freely, not counting the $44 billion Musk spent to acquire Twitter and ensure his ability to share what's on his mind.īut speculation about the death of the Twitter API is premature, based on the fact that some clients on specific platforms continue to function. The bad thing is that it’s not a third-party solution. The good thing is that, since TweetDeck is owned by Twitter, it’ll probably survive future API changes and whatnot. ![]() It’s quite responsive, all things considered, and it’s a good-enough solution. I selected the previously downloaded icon file, and now on my PowerBooks running Leopard I basically have a working TweetDeck ‘app’ with a decent icon. In Fluid (or rather, in the newly created TweetDeck app), I entered the General pane in the Preferences and pressed the Change button near ‘Application icon’: I browsed Google Images a bit, then found this one, which I downloaded. Then I needed to find a proper icon for the app. Once Fluid created the app based on the TweetDeck website, I logged into my account and everything appeared just fine. On the other, more powerful Macs running Leopard, as I said, I was a very happy Itsy user.įor my PowerBook G4s, I ended up ‘creating’ a TweetDeck app by mixing Fluid with the Web-based TweetDeck application.įortunately I still had around an old version of Fluid (0.9.6) that works on PowerPC Macs, so, after signing up for a TweetDeck account (which is handy, since you can manage multiple Twitter accounts if you have them), I fired up Fluid and in the Create a Site Specific Browser window that appears I filled the fields as follows: Before Twitter updated their API to 1.1, on the Cube I had concocted a lightweight solution using a combination of Hahlo and Steven Frank’s WebDesktop app (a sort of simplified browser to layer a webpage over the Mac desktop - see its page on Google Project Hosting), and you can see the result on this old article I wrote in 2010 (scroll to the end of the article). I still use three PowerPC Macs on a frequent basis: a Power Mac G4 Cube with Mac OS X 10.4.11, a 12-inch 1 GHz PowerBook G4, and a 17-inch 1.33 GHz PowerBook G4, both with Mac OS X 10.5.8. At the same time I find quite ridiculous that someone with a machine such as the quad-core 2.5 GHz Power Mac G5, which is still rather powerful, can’t use a third-party native Twitter client just because Twitter has become increasingly capricious in pursuit of their own interests. I understand it’s naïve and quaint to complain that things don’t work anymore on a platform that has seen little to no development since Apple completed the transition to Intel processors and architecture. ![]() Then, of course, one could use Twitter’s own website, or their recently acquired and overhauled TweetDeck (at least the Web-based version, since the native client requires at least Mac OS X 10.6 to run), but it’s impractical to be using Twitter in a browser tab, and on older G3 and G4 machines, even loading Twitter’s site is a daunting task, and the general performance (of the site, of the browser, and of the Mac itself) suffers noticeably. An extensive reworking of the code was something I just simply didn’t have time for… What now?Īs far as I know, the only two third-party clients still working on PowerPC Macs are the text-based command-line TTYtter and the Web-based Dabr. When originally announced the plans for the v1.0 API retirement I investigated ‘upgrading’ Hahlo to use v1.1 of the API, but the changeover would have required much more than a simple find ‘1.0’ replace with ‘1.1’. Even Hahlo, a Web-based client, has stopped working, and in a great farewell post, the developer of Hahlo writes: However, the last update to the Twitter API (1.1) simply requires too much work for a developer to even consider releasing an update for the PowerPC platform. Using it on my 12-inch PowerBook G4 was really a pleasure. I was a fan of Itsy, in particular, because of its small footprint. Up until a few weeks ago, if you still used a PowerPC Mac (even as a very secondary machine), you could hunt the Web for the last working PPC version of Twitter clients such as Echofon, YoruFukurou, Itsy, and you would have been able to use such clients without any problem. The latest round of “Kill the third-party client,” which Twitter officially calls updating the API, has practically neutralised all native Twitter clients for the PowerPC platform.
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