This twitter wall is preloaded with the Full Frontal JavaScript Conference details, but is easy to change and customise.
JavaScript customisation happens in config.js
and style customisations in custom.css
.
If setting this up yourself is tricky or too much work, or even beyond your skill (I appreciate not everyone who runs a conference is going to be happy to code too), we're offering a full service with similar (but more) functionality at http://confwall.com. Please check it out - also available for free to free events.
Due to Twitter API 1.1 changes, the twitter wall requires a Twitter API proxy. The proxy allows you to make requests to Twitter's API from the browser. If you're a Node user, you can use Left Logic's twitter-proxy. Whatever proxy you choose to use, you need to tell the wall about it. To do so, modify the baseUrl
in config.js.
The twitter wall is able to both search for tweets and source tweets from a twitter list (though this is optional).
In the config.js
you will want to set some values:
search
is the same string you would search twitter for to find tweets about your conference. The example provided in theconfig.js
you can see includes multiple search phrases, so don't be coy!list
allows you to curate a list on twitter of all your attendees and capture those tweets mixed in with the search results. This is an optional value.timings.showTweetsEvery
gives you control of when to show each new tweet. The way this app works is collects (about 200) tweets in one go, then gradually shows them all, thisshowTweetsEvery
value controls the rate that they're shown. The value must be in a valid timing value (see below)
To customise the HTML for the individual tweets, find the template in index.html
and edit #tweet_template
.
I've included a simple Node app that will capture tweets as files both for debugging later, but also so you have a backup copy of all the tweets from the day (or days):
$ cd history
$ node server.js
This will read the config.js
file and capture the tweets in the history/data
directory. Setting the debug
flag will then make use of these tweets and ignore the search
value.
A timing values are simply strings that are converted to JavaScript times. Simple to understand (I hope):
- "10m" is 10 minutes
- "5.5m" is 5 minutes, 30 seconds (as it's a floating point, and not minutes and seconds)
- "1h" is 1 hour
- "10s" is 10 seconds
- "100ms" is 100 milliseconds
Open index.html
and find the #schedule
element. All the div
s inside are rotated throughout the day. The important attribute is the data-time
value. This is set to a 24 hour clock in hours and minutes so that 3:45pm is represented as <div data-time="1545">
.
When the app starts it will automatically find the schedule element that is due next. By default it will show the next schedule exactly on time, but you can customise this using the config.js
settings. Change timings.showNextScheduleEarlyBy
to a timing value (like 10m
) which will show the next schedule 10 minutes ahead of when it's due.
This is useful for when you have talks going on and the screen is being used for slides. Once the talk is finished, you can switch back to the twitter wall and it will be all set to show the next talk.
Edit the custom.css
to give your own branded feel to the schedule.
Finally, if you wish to use a full sized background image on the schedule, the current time is applied to the #schedule
element, which can be used in custom.css
:
#schedule[data-time="0940"] {
background-image: url(/images/sample/remy.jpg);
}
In the example above the schedule time matches the time in the data-time
property for Remy speaking, so the #schedule
element has it's background-image
set.
This is a useful area to show sponsors and messages for the conference. Inside index.html
find the #notices
element and all the div
s inside are rotated. Each notice is shown for the amount of time set in custom.js
value timings.defaultNoticeHoldTime
, but this can be customised for specific notices individually.
A notice is simply a div
element. This can hold images, text and so on. To add a custom hold time, add the following attribute: data-hold-time="20s"
. This will show that particular notice for 20 seconds.
To make the notice appear over the entire app, add a class of fullscreen
. By default this will overlay the entire screen, but if you want to animate this in place, edit the custom.css
and edit the fullscreen
class so the notice is offscreen, but make sure to restore the value when it's being shown. For example, if the #notice3
element should be fullscreen and slide up from the bottom of the screen:
#notices .fullscreen {
top: 100%;
}
#notice3.show {
top: 0;
}
Note that the #notice3
element has the show
class and the top
value is set to 0
. As all the notice elements have animations set on all properties, so the animations should work.
By default the twitter wall takes up full height on the right, but if you edit index.html
it's simple to rearrange the elements to suit your needs. Also look at the hflex-wrapper
and other flex-box styles in app/screen.css
to see more layout options.
Be wary the more you test this, it's possible to get blocked by Twitter's rate limit. For that, I've included a debug
flag in the config.js
that will read static tweets (about my own conference, sorry) to populate the twitter wall.
Let me know if you've used this project at your conference and I'll include it below (and feel free to send a pic - it's good for the ego!). So far:
- Full Frontal JS conf
- Chirp (twitter's first conference) (pic)
- beyond tellerrand 2011
- btPLAY 2012 (pic1 & pic2)
- Reasons to be Appy (pic1, pic2, pic3)
- beyond tellerrand 2012 (pic1 & pic2)
- All Your Base 2012 (pic1, pic2, screen capture)
- jQuery UK 2013 (pic1, pic2, pic3)
- All Your Base 2013 (pic1, pic2, pic3)
Please do raise any issues, or even better, send a pull request to improve this project.