Twitter from Excel 2007

I cannot think of any compelling reason for sending a tweet from a form in Excel other than it's kind of cool to know it can be done. Nevertheless, the little add-in for Excel has its charm as an odd little novelty:

How to write your own Twitter client in Excel (Userform version is here)

You can see my little tweet sent from Excel here:

https://twitter.com/johnrdurant

I tip my cap to Chandoo (and JP for the form version) on this one.

Stay tuned for my addition to the app tomorrow--- I intend to add a little mix of technology in there that will make the application more relevant.

Rock Thought of the Day:  

The Black Crowes 'Warpaint' LP is fantastic

Warpaint

Listened to their new CD and it has some of their very best work. Granted, the two previous records were a little bit of a strain in my view. But, this one proves that they have not lost their touch, and they are reaching farther, producing better material than ever. Give it a listen, and make sure you have already set aside the $$ to buy a copy, or it will make waiting much harder.

ROCK ON!

Technorati Tags: Office 2007,XML,Office Development,OBA,OOXML,Content Controls,Microsoft Office System,Microsoft Word,VBA,Excel,Twitter,Black Crowes,Warpaint

Comments

  • Anonymous
    March 04, 2009
    PingBack from http://www.clickandsolve.com/?p=18203

  • Anonymous
    March 04, 2009
    Hi John, I'm working on some improvements to the add-in. You can add/remove friends, browse your friends list, and the add-in also picks up your userid and password from an optional text file placed in the same folder.

  • Anonymous
    March 04, 2009
    Twitter "more relevant"?? he he he. BTW, John, good to see you back blogging.

  • Anonymous
    March 05, 2009
    Thanks John... @Jon, you are skeptical about twitter? I think twitter is far better than most of the other social mess out there..

  • Anonymous
    March 05, 2009
    My comment about the usefulness was not about Twitter itself! I'm a big fan! Rather, what I meant, somewhat playfully, is that there is no compelling reason why sending tweets should be done in Excel launched from the Ribbon. IOW: there is no swelling chorus in the vast population of Excel users with this demand, "Gee, I love using Excel to put together my sales reports. But, I sure wish I could send tweets from here while I work on my pivot charts." The piece I'm going to add might help us close the loop on this issue by making sending tweets from Excel actually have some functional relevance. So-- I dig Twitter (have since it came out), and I dig your add-in. It's all good. Best, John

  • Anonymous
    March 10, 2009
    Chandoo - How do you make sense of it all? There's too much fluff, even from the few folks I follow.