Now this is a pretty neat plugin:
Wordbook allows you to send your wordpress blog posts directly to your Facebook mini feed without any cut and paste nastyness - fantatsic if you tend to used wordpress as a blog and Facebook for networking rather than the other way round
You can get the plugin here: http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wordbook/
September 30th, 2007
Chris
Today I have started writing 2 new Facebook applications, Doomsday Device and Game Stats.
You can find out more about each by visiting the following development blogs:
September 19th, 2007
Chris
Yesterday for a bit of fun I decided I'd try and write my first application for facebook - and I have to say the setup based on the example code they give you is pretty straightforward, however it could do with some extra vital documentation.
What would be in this documentation you ask?
You might think, "being a social networking site users may want to upload photos or other files to your app. for various reasons", so lets make that side of things easy and secure.
Well obviously facebook didn't, and as such seem to have turned off/prevented access to PHP's $_FILES array and don't mention it anywhere obvious.
This is annoying as it wasn't really mentioned anywhere and, after all, your app is essentially it's own self contained program sitting on it's own server somewhere which obeys it's own set of rules and just appears on facebook by means of, what can only be described as an extended iframe, so why should they prevent access?
In fact file upload is possible but you have to do it via some convoluted method where you mime encode the file and send it through via POST, which is a pain.
Though I spent 3 hours or so trying to work out why my app wasn't receiving files before finding this out, that hasn't deterred me and you can expect some more posts about Facebook app building here as soon as I have time to write them
Also Find Me On