When Did You Tweet That? Twistory Improves Google Calendar Support

Robin Wauters

Robin Wauters is the European Editor of tech blog The Next Web and lead editor of Virtualization.com. He was a senior staff writer at TechCrunch until his departure in February 2012. Aside from his professional blogging activities, he’s an entrepreneur, event organizer, occasional board adviser and angel investor but most importantly an all-round startup champion. Wauters lives and works in... → Learn More

Monday, December 19th, 2011
twist

Twistory, which lets people save their tweet backlog to their favorite calendaring application, has finally come through with full support for popular Web-based calendaring service Google Calendar.

You can now subscribe to Twistory using your existing Twitter account and automatically view in Google Calendar when you’ve tweeted what. Up until now, compatibility with Google Calendar was a little flaky, but the team behind Twistory tells me it is now finally stable.

Twistory is available for free, allowing you to visualize your last month worth of tweets in your calendaring application of choice.

There’s also a paid version, Twistory Pro ($1/month), which gives you access to your entire Twitter backlog (currently limited by Twitter to 3,200 tweets) and allows you to export your entire Twitter history as a CSV file.


Company: Twistory
Website: twistory.net
Launch Date: January 2008

Twistory is an application that allows you to subscribe to your twitter messages in any calendar application supporting iCalendar(Google Calendar, iCal, Outlook, …), offering a quick and interesting overview of what you’ve been saying, doing and thinking over the past few days, weeks and months. Twistory also allows for basic timetracking, using a t and /t timetracking tag. Currently only public Twitter accounts are supported. Twistory was created by Tijs Vrolix and Pixelpanic, a small online and interactive communications agency located...

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Product: Google Calendar
Website: google.com
Company Google

Google Calendar lets users create events, manage multiple calendars, and share calendars with teams and groups. Users can view their calendar by day, week or month. Calendar has a “Quick Add” feature that lets users input natural language entries fast. For instance, you can type “Dinner with Michael 7pm tomorrow” into the entry box and Calendar will add “Dinner with Michael” into tomorrow’s agenda at 7pm without needing a specific date. Calendar can also be set-up to send you...

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