From: theom+news@chiark.greenend.org.uk   
      
   Computer Nerd Kev wrote:   
   > Web forums keep annoying me more and more with bloated interfaces,   
   > so I'm using them less and less, yet there's less and less to read   
   > on Usenet too. So lately I've been considering, not entirely   
   > seriously, writing a program to scrape specific web forums and   
   > generate a news spool with the content of the forum's latest posts   
   > for me to read (either locally, or perhaps remotely via NNTP).   
   >   
   > Has anyone done this before? I know there are various web forum   
   > platforms that support NNTP server-side, but I'm talking about web   
   > forums hosted by other people who I have no association or   
   > influence with. Has anyone done something that's purely a   
   > client-side implementation?   
      
   There's a mobile app called Tapatalk, which hooks into a number of web   
   forums to make them mobile friendly, including posting. I think they have   
   plugins for various platforms like phpBB, which forum operators can install   
   to get access to their forum from mobiles. If you see postings on a forum   
   that include text like 'Sent from my Samsung SM-GT9711QB via Tapatalk' then   
   that forum is Tapatalk enabled (or was at the time of posting).   
      
   It's been a decade or more since I looked at it, but thinking was that it   
   might be possible to hook into the Tapatalk interface and get some kind of   
   access to the raw forum database, rather than scraping the forum's web page.   
      
   Tapatalk still seems to be a thing, but use of phpBB and similar forums has   
   declined. Maybe they have plugins for Discourse and friends now?   
      
   Anyway, it might be worth digging into the Tapatalk protocol and seeing if   
   there's a way to hook into it from outside the Tapatalk ecosystem. I have   
   no idea if it's possible.   
      
   Theo   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
|