I love the idea of IFTTT (and automation in general) but everytime I go their website, I just sit there for 30 minutes and realize that most recipes would annoy me more than they would help me. Maybe I just have no imagination.
Some services can be configured to GET or POST to a URL of your choosing when something happens. E.g. you can ask Github to "GET http://my-site.org/action/ whenever you push commits to your repositories. If you control my-site.org, you can have the /action/ script do whatever you like. These "push" notifications are super- simple, reasonably low latency, and don't require polling.
I did something similar when taking an operating systems class. Linux kernel compiles take quite a long time, so I set up my site to send me a text message when I "GET /compile-done." Then, a quick "make ; curl http://my-site/compile-done would drop me a text message and I could get a sandwich or something until it was done.
Ditto however I changed the way I approach it, now Im hooked.
Instead of browsing recipes, just know the kind of things that are possible and leave. But, next time you run into a frustration †, hopefully IFTTT will be in your peripheral considerations and then you can set it up. Much more relevant that way.
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† Like for example you wished you had a message the night before that it was gonna snow big time during the night, so you can set the alarm a little earlier. Or something like that.
The only thing I use it for is saving entries on selected RSS feeds to Pocket. That way I can read them on my phone when I'm away from 3G/wifi (on the tube, in the gym, in a lift etc).
I have only two recipes: I get emails for reddit replies and messages, and any post I save in reddit gets added my to Pocket queue.
Both are fairly standard actually. I wouldn't call them creative. I often look at the website, and it makes me think of the awesome things possible, but I then realize I really don't need that much automation or mashups.
I have one where it grabs my Instagram photos and stores them in a folder in Dropbox and then my screen saver uses that folder as a photo source to display.
Not bragging here, but a while ago I used IFTTT to create a system where I created a quasi-alert system for a local legend/mentally ill guy who wanders the subway in my city. Everyone knows him, but sometimes he disappears for a month or two and people online start to talk about where he went.
I began wheatpasting a photo of him with a QR over his mouth (he often says the government/big corporations are trying to kill him) and the phrase "have you seen me?" around the subway stations he's usually on. The QR code went to an SMS #, which caught an IFTTT trigger to turn that SMS into an email (to an anonymous Gmail account) which, upon receipt, caught another IFTTT trigger and posted the text of their message to a Tumblr account -- one seamless workflow. This way, people could in more-or-less real time keep tabs on him and how he's doing.
It went well until the police took down the posters, of course. Haven't thought of a way around that, yet.
While that sounds cool it's also scary. I mean, everyone is stalking him.. it's not 'trying to kill him', but it's a reason to become paranoid. Without his agreement, I don't believe this is ok. (For non-humans however.. )
You put up posters encouraging random people to track a paranoid mentally ill person? Did you not think that might have harmed his mental health to see those posters of himself and have people pointing him out to their friends without understanding it? It'd be creepy enough for a normal person to see such posters about themselves.
Nah, most people are just genuinely concerned about him, especially when he disappears. I'm in China -- if I did this in NYC, I wouldn't have done it. But that type of malicious intent is far, far less here. When he's gone, there's lots of talk online about where he went and people start looking out for him. I just made a way to scale and centralize it.
I have a pretty in depth write up of how I use IFTTT and Evernote to collect my digital breadcrumbs. I particularly like that every month I get a screenshot of my last.fm chart. It's amazing how much music can spark your memory.
After reading your article I'm now investigating around that Doxie stuff, thanks for this. The wife regularly pesters me because she wants to scan stuff but I've always thought scanners where device from the 90s, never occured to me they actually evolved (SD card, dropbox, etc)
I haven't found any IFTTT recipe that would be particularly useful to me. However, I've set up a few useful jobs on Zapier, for instance I have CircleCI automatically create a GitHub issue upon build failures using Webhooks.
I get an email if the weather shows it'll rain tomorrow. That's kinda nice. Also, anything I star on Google Reader saves to Instapaper, but that wont' be useful very much longer.
Yeah, I find automatic email / notifications for things like weather help you acquire an ambient, almost sub-conscious awareness of things you wouldn't be able to glean from the environment. Not IFTT, but I like PM software like Trello for this too.
I wonder about other things that are nice to have an ambient awareness of. It can't be too many things, otherwise you risk overwhelming yourself with notifications / beeps / things to check / glowing orbs, but I bet we all have a bit of room for more of that.
Even better than IFTTT for weather is the iOS app Dark Sky. I have it set to give me a push notification whenever it starts raining in my area. THAT'S a useful feature so I remember to grab an umbrella if I don't notice the rain yet.
We have an in-joke in the Pacific North West about our 'jacket summers'. I use IFTTT to automatically post what to wear the following day. This being said, it's not very popular :)
If IFTTT even goes down, you can circle back to http://umbrellatoday.com/. Enter a location, and you can register an e-mail address (of mobile phone) where a message should be send to.
That was my initial experiment with IFTTT, too, but I got annoyed by the inability to schedule "recipes", so I'd get said email (or tweet etc.) at a specific time. There is a date & time event source, but as you can't chain predicates...
I think the integration of Philips Hue gives an opportunity to do some creative stuff. Once there was also a recipe to automatically create a list of people who engage in conversations with you, but i think it doesn't work anymore after the changes in Twitter API/terms.
I'm excited about the recent integration with Hue. I used to have a little mechanical timer that would turn a lamp on when it was time to get up in the morning. I don't have much use for it this time of year since the sun is up before I am. But if I could set IFTTT to set a lamp indicating the weather forecast for the day right when I wake up, that would be cool :)
I really like IFTTT. None of my recipes are really all that clever, but they save me money and time, which is why I like IFTTT.
I have about 10 recipes searching classified or bargain sites for various things I intend to buy, but don't need urgently, and get an alert sent to Pushover when matches are found. The sites do not allow you to search and email results, but you can search and generate an RSS feed.
After Google Reader was announced as shutting down I made recipes for my favourite sites and push the articles to Pocket. Offline articles ready to go every morning.
And then there's all the Ingress passcodes I get automatically forwarded to Pushover...
A few weeks ago, when _why the lucky stiff's website was updating, I had a realization:
His site was hosted on GitHub pages, so I could get the RSS from his commits, feed it through IFTTT, and have it text me whenever he pushed new content.
While his site is 'gone,' the repository still exists, so I still have the trigger active.
I used to have few recipes each taking tweets from my account tagged with #reN, retweet them with a new hashtag re(N-1) -- for tweets that I wanted to reach a wider audience.
Example: #re2 would get auto-retweeted for two days in a row.
Around the time I got this working correctly, twitter kicked ifttt out. sigh
When I was video blogging it reduced a 1h daily process to a 5m one, so depending on how you value time. In my case, my alternative was to pay a PA £15/h, so there was some [small] money attached.
I had socialcam on my phone post to YouTube. ifttt picked up new youtube videos and posted them as wordpress posts. Feedburner then picked up the RSS item and tweeted it.
So making a 5m video ended up taking exactly 5m and everything else was cobbled together as a chain of services.
I've played around with IFTT and Zapier and found both quite limiting. I wished I could just write code to connect the APIs exactly the way I wanted. Has anyone else had a similar experience?
I'm building a platform to enable just that for businesses. It's mostly geared towards marketing integration and automation but could really be used any way imaginable.
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[ 675 ms ] story [ 2912 ms ] threadI tried to use it to crawl photos and news and put it to my google drive, but in most cases I ended up with thumbnails and intro-texts. :\",
I did something similar when taking an operating systems class. Linux kernel compiles take quite a long time, so I set up my site to send me a text message when I "GET /compile-done." Then, a quick "make ; curl http://my-site/compile-done would drop me a text message and I could get a sandwich or something until it was done.
Instead of browsing recipes, just know the kind of things that are possible and leave. But, next time you run into a frustration †, hopefully IFTTT will be in your peripheral considerations and then you can set it up. Much more relevant that way.
---
† Like for example you wished you had a message the night before that it was gonna snow big time during the night, so you can set the alarm a little earlier. Or something like that.
This took an anxious week and turned it into full blown 24x7 nightmare. ;)
I began wheatpasting a photo of him with a QR over his mouth (he often says the government/big corporations are trying to kill him) and the phrase "have you seen me?" around the subway stations he's usually on. The QR code went to an SMS #, which caught an IFTTT trigger to turn that SMS into an email (to an anonymous Gmail account) which, upon receipt, caught another IFTTT trigger and posted the text of their message to a Tumblr account -- one seamless workflow. This way, people could in more-or-less real time keep tabs on him and how he's doing.
It went well until the police took down the posters, of course. Haven't thought of a way around that, yet.
People used QR codes?
I'm very surprised (seriously)
On Fridays around 4pm I have an automatic tweet going out asking what's happening that night. Nothing too fancy.
I archive any Instagram photo I like to Drive also.
You know you can just browse your starred items, right?
It uses RSS feeds to spit out content. I've only sent maybe 5 tweets in the accounts entire life.
http://aaronfrancis.com/blog/2013/2/26/how-i-use-evernote-an...
It also triggers an email when I have new artist recommendation based on my scrobbling history.
I wonder about other things that are nice to have an ambient awareness of. It can't be too many things, otherwise you risk overwhelming yourself with notifications / beeps / things to check / glowing orbs, but I bet we all have a bit of room for more of that.
@jacketsummer
I simply have no imagination when it comes to things like this. I really wish i did. I could probably make my life much easier if i did.
I have about 10 recipes searching classified or bargain sites for various things I intend to buy, but don't need urgently, and get an alert sent to Pushover when matches are found. The sites do not allow you to search and email results, but you can search and generate an RSS feed.
After Google Reader was announced as shutting down I made recipes for my favourite sites and push the articles to Pocket. Offline articles ready to go every morning.
And then there's all the Ingress passcodes I get automatically forwarded to Pushover...
http://www.quora.com/IFTTT-1/What-is-the-coolest-IFTTT-Recip...
---which they sprang after years of collecting good stuff from good-spirited folks. Thanks but no thanks.
Which has been annoying on occasion - but less occasions than I'd've thought.
Then at the end of the year I have a full list of everywhere I went and can give to my accountant.
His site was hosted on GitHub pages, so I could get the RSS from his commits, feed it through IFTTT, and have it text me whenever he pushed new content.
While his site is 'gone,' the repository still exists, so I still have the trigger active.
Example: #re2 would get auto-retweeted for two days in a row.
Around the time I got this working correctly, twitter kicked ifttt out. sigh
I had socialcam on my phone post to YouTube. ifttt picked up new youtube videos and posted them as wordpress posts. Feedburner then picked up the RSS item and tweeted it.
So making a 5m video ended up taking exactly 5m and everything else was cobbled together as a chain of services.