See me in action at @TroveNewsBot.
Built using the Trove API, the Twitter API, the AlchemyAPI, and the GeoNames webservice.
For TroveNewsBot's unofficial biography see: TroveNewsBot: The story so far.
Don't miss TroveNewsBot's Guide to Child Rearing.
- Include the word 'hello' in a message to @TroveNewsBot to receive a greeting and a random newspaper article.
- Any other message will be treated as a query and will be sent off to the Trove API to look for matching results in the newspaper database.
- To receive any old random newspaper article from amongst the 100 million odd available, just tweet TroveNewsBot the hashtag '#luckydip' and nothing else.
By default, the TroveNewsBot tweets the first (ie most relevant) matching result back to you. To change this you can:
- Include the hashtag '#luckydip' to receive a random article from the matching results.
- Include the hashtag '#earliest' to receive the earliest matching article.
- Include the hashtag '#latest' to receive the latest matching article.
By default, the search terms you supply are sent directly to the Trove API without any modification. To change this you can:
- Include the hashtag '#any' to search for articles that match any of your search terms. This is the same as adding an 'OR' between your terms.
- Include a year to limit your search to that year. (Note that the majority of Trove's newspaper content was published between 1803 and 1954.)
- Include the hashtag '#here' and location-enable your tweet to add the name of the place nearest to you to the query string. The place information is retrieved from the GeoNames reverse geocoding API.
If you tweet a url to TroveNewsBot you enter Opinionator mode. In this mode, TroveNewsBot examines the page at the supplied url and builds a query based on it's contents. The result is a commentary of sorts drawn from from TroveNewsBot's reservoir of 100 million historic newspaper articles.
By default, TroveNewsBot assembles its query by looking for a number of elements on the page:
- The first set of h1 tags
- A meta tag with a name including the string 'title'
- Whatever's in the title tag
TroveNewsBot takes the text of whichever of these is found first, removes stopwords, slices off the first ten words, sends them off to Trove, and tweets the result.
If you add the hashtag '#keywords' to a tweet containing a url, TroveNewsBot uses the AlchemyAPI to extract the ten top-ranked key words or phrases from the complete text of the page. These are then sent to Trove as before. This should probably (maybe) increase the relevance of TroveNewsBot's response.
- At 9am, 3pm and 9pm (AEST), TroveNewsBot tweets a random article that has been updated or added in the previous 24 hours.
- At 8am, 12 noon, 4pm and 8pm (AEST), TroveNewsBot tweets a response to the latest news item from the ABC's Just In page.
- Every few hours TroveNewsBot tweets a response to the most recent link from DPLA tweeted by DPLABot.
Released under CC0 licence.