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March 23, 2009

Talking HEADs

We made a small change over the weekend to make bit.ly click total displays more accurate. We’re now screening out http HEAD requests.

A HEAD request occurs when someone, or something, requests a small amount of information about an url. You might use a HEAD request to find out what site a given bit.ly url is pointing to, or if a particular link contains an MP3. You don’t actually have to visit the website.

We never used to see many HEAD requests, but that’s changed as url-shortening and micro-blogging have become more popular, and more mainstream. Today, there are a number of browser plug-ins that automatically expand short urls, and automated scripts that translate your twitter stream into blog entries. Some of these utilities make HEAD requests for bit.ly urls. 

HEAD requests are still a tiny fraction of our traffic, but we’ve seen them increase over the last week or two, and we decided we needed to adjust click metrics in response.

HEAD requests are definitely an indication of interest in a given url, but they don’t necessarily result in a direct clickthrough to a long url in a browser. Consequently, we’ve decided to begin removing HEAD requests from our click counts.  While there may be some value in knowing that HEAD requests have been made to your bit.ly link, we don’t feel they merit inclusion in our click totals.

Our primary goal in doing this is to more accurately reflect genuine user traffic for your bit.ly link. Over the next few weeks, we’ll be rolling out more features to segment traffic and to help you distinguish between bot and crawler traffic and genuine clicks. 

It is important to note that every click you see on the info page is a real request that was made to bit.ly.  We can’t force a script, a crawler, or a browser extension to follow the bit.ly redirect to the destination server. When they don’t, your bitly clicks might register a bit higher than what is shown in the server logs of the destination website.  

We’ll continue to take steps to screen out those clicks which are obviously not following the redirect in order to deliver the most accurate depiction of your short url traffic possible. 

We believe the best place to help us grow into the url service you love is right here within our own community of bit.ly users. We welcome your ideas and feedback.

toddml posted on March 23, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (View) | Share with Bit.ly Sidebar | new @bitly blog - Talking HEADsTweet & Track
February 18, 2009

Fresh from the Labs: bitlynow Twitter Bot

We recently cooked up a Twitterbot in bit.ly labs that once an hour publishes the bit.ly link that is currently getting the most clicks. Although this tool is still very much in beta, we are seeing some very interesting links pop up in this feed. Check it out at:

http://twitter.com/bitlynow

Let us know if this sparks any cool ideas, or even better yet, consume the bot data from the Twitter API, mash it up with data from our /info and /stats apis ( http://bit.ly/apidocs ), and show us something cool.

kortina posted on February 18, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (View) | Share with Bit.ly Sidebar | new @bitly blog - Fresh from the Labs: bitlynow Twitter BotTweet & Track
February 6, 2009

bit.ly API Contest Winners!

The bit.ly API contest ( http://bit.ly/uyoj ) has come to a conclusion, and frankly we were overwhelmed by the variety and breadth of the submissions.  The submissions ranged from  API libraries and apps to web service integrations and even file system integration.  We’re lucky to have such an involved developer community, and couldn’t be happier with the results.  Every single entry will receive bit.ly shwag (A bit.ly blowfish, bit.ly t-shirt, and a couple of bit.ly stickers), but as promised, we had to choose a few that stood out from the rest.  It wasn’t an easy decision, but without further ado (drumroll please….):


1st Prize (winner of a netbook and VIP Pass to Shorty Awards):
bit.lify
http://bit.ly/bitlify - A BlackBerry application that makes it easy to share urls on the go.

We’ve had a lot of people ask for more convenient ways to use bit.ly on mobile devices, and this one took the cake.


2nd Prize (Winner of an iPod Shuffle, and a VIP Pass to Shorty Awards)
PHP and JQuery bit.ly Libs
http://bit.ly/2yjuNJ

We chose this entry for its thoroughness and utility.  If you’re looking to integrate bit.ly with your PHP application, take a look at this project.


3rd Prize (Winner of an iPod Shuffle, and a VIP Pass to Shorty Awards)
IEShortURL
http://bit.ly/Snjo - A bit.ly add-in for Internet Explorer

A straightforward, useful entry that provides clear utility for IE users.



Honorable Mentions:

140it
http://bit.ly/ppJV - A bookmarklet that compresses tweets. URLs within the tweet are turned into bit.ly URLs.
(wins a super tiny 8G USB key we like at bit.ly)

bitlyfs
http://bit.ly/bitlyfs - A macfuse filesystem that lets you mount your bit.ly history as a local drive, with thumbnails as file icons.
(wins a super tiny 8G USB key we like at bit.ly)

Last.fm Love / Twitter Mashup
http://bit.ly/1yur - After signing up, any track that you ‘love’ on lastfm will automatically generate a tweet from you that has the track’s artist and name, as well as a link to it so your followers can give it a listen.
(wins a super tiny 8G USB key we like at bit.ly)

My Wahi
http://bit.ly/mywahi - A mashup that lets anyone bookmark geographic locations.
(wins a super tiny 8G USB key we like at bit.ly)




Below is the complete list of entries. Everyone who entered will be receiving a bit.ly blowfish, a bit.ly T-shirt, bit.ly stickers, and possibly some other cool schwag. We’ll be getting in touch for your T-shirt sizes and mailing addresses.


Last.fm Love / Twitter Mashup
http://bit.ly/1yur - After siging up, any track that you ‘love’ on lastfm will automatically generate a tweet from you that has the track’s artist and name, as well as a link to it so your followers can give it a listen.

Tweetbots
http://bit.ly/ukTq - service that allows you to do many different types of bots, retweet, dm-tweet, autofollow, and feed-tweets.

Tweetly Updater
http://bit.ly/8Rj - a Wordpress plugin

Greasemonkey Script
http://bit.ly/WahC - Auto Replace URLs with bit.ly URLs when composing messages in Twitter

near.ly
http://bit.ly/TlUQ -  Sends you links to news and blog posts happening within 1000 feet of any address in the United States.

iTweet
http://bit.ly/KAZz - A web Twitter Client

Travel Notes
http://bit.ly/xBuf - A toolbar for sharing web pages about travel with friends

bit.ly Ubiquity Mashup
http://bit.ly/qGSl - A ubiquity command for shortening links with bit.ly

LazyTweet
http://bit.ly/N9rK - A mashup of the Lazyweb and twitter, allowing twitter users to ask questions and ideas to a network beyond their own followers.

Tarpipe
http://bit.ly/11FvT - The bit.ly connector lets you automatically shorten URLs you’re sharing using the bit.ly service.

Gritly
http://bit.ly/11UHK - Shrinks a group of URLs into one bit.ly link

Annotated links
http://bit.ly/2V7wAL - Pack together one or several links and your own comment as post-it note.

140it
http://bit.ly/ppJV - A bookmarklet that makes tweets less than 140 characters. If the tweet has a url in it, it reduces it using the bit.ly api.


IEShortURL
http://bit.ly/Snjo - A bit.ly add-in for Internet Explorer

My Wahi
http://bit.ly/mywahi - A mashup that lets anyone bookmark geographic locations

Halfbite
http://bit.ly/qchS - Analyze tweet streams for various users and/or for your timeline

Jive Gas
http://bit.ly/dvoI - Uses the bit.ly API to shorten (and expand) URI to then do twitter, delicious, digg and yahoo boss searches (among others) for related and relevant content.

bitlyfs
http://bit.ly/bitlyfs - A macfuse filesystem that lets you mount your bit.ly history as a local drive

BigTweet
http://bit.ly/XT4p - Bookmarklet for posting to Twitter from any webpage

bit.lify
http://bit.ly/bitlify - A BlackBerry application that makes it easy to share urls on the go

Chirply
http://bit.ly/gPcCb - It’s a way to discover content and people relevant to your interests by browsing through bit.ly links being passed around Twitter.


C# bit.ly Lib
http://bit.ly/4pHkch

BitlyXAPI Library for .NET bit.ly Lib
http://bit.ly/gnBS

JSP bit.ly Lib
http://bit.ly/1PCHeJ

Python bit.ly Lib for Google App Engine
http://bit.ly/VrhM

Python bit.ly Lib
http://bit.ly/ocBG

Ruby bit.ly Lib
http://bit.ly/rubyapi
or
sudo gem install philnash-bitly

PHP and JQuery bit.ly Libs
http://bit.ly/2yjuNJ

kortina posted on February 6, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (View) | Share with Bit.ly Sidebar | new @bitly blog - bit.ly API Contest Winners!Tweet & Track
January 21, 2009

bit.ly API Contest Updates and Extended Submission Deadline

The bit.ly API Contest ( announced here: http://bit.ly/1DHS1e ) is in full force and we’ve had some great submissions so far.

Here are some of the things we’ve already seen:

Last.fm Love / Twitter Mashup
http://bit.ly/1yur - After siging up, any track that you ‘love’ on lastfm will automatically generate a tweet from you that has the track’s artist and name, as well as a link to it so your followers can give it a listen.

Tweetbots
http://bit.ly/ukTq - service that allows you to do many different types of bots, retweet, dm-tweet, autofollow, and feed-tweets.

Tweetly Updater
http://bit.ly/8Rj - a Wordpress plugin

Greasemonkey Script
http://bit.ly/WahC - Auto Replace URLs with bit.ly URLs when composing messages in Twitter

And a bunch of others.  Keep the submissions coming!

* * *

We’ve heard about some other people working on things they have not yet submitted and thought it might be a good idea to give everyone a little more time to finish up their projects. The new deadline for submission will be 11:30pm EST on February 4.

kortina posted on January 21, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (View) | Share with Bit.ly Sidebar | new @bitly blog - bit.ly API Contest Updates and Extended Submission DeadlineTweet & Track
January 14, 2009

Announcing the bit.ly API Contest!

As you all know, bit.ly the blowfish just LOVES to shorten URLs.  In fact, he’s so excited about shortening URLs, he’s decided to sponsor a URL shortening competition!

The rules are simple: use our API to do something interesting, useful, unique, or that enables others to more easily use the bit.ly API.  Some examples of things you might want to build:

* A blog plugin
* A bookmarklet
* A Twitter bot
* An Outlook plugin
* Client Libraries for various languages (PHP, Ruby, Python, Lua, etc)- See JS api for an example: http://bit.ly/4c3Q8
* Amusing implementations for obscure platforms.
* Novel or 1337 uses of bit.ly to track, manage, or share content

Checkout http://bit.ly/goodies to see some of the things we’ve built and get more ideas

Every legitimate entry to the competition gets bit.ly shwag in the form of a pufferfish mascot and a bit.ly t-shirt.  And for the best of the best (calculated using our entirely arbitrary “hey that’s cool” index), we have something even better.

One top prize: a netbook computer and a VIP Pass to the shorty awards

Two runner up prizes: a VIP pass to the shorty awards

Additionally, the most interesting/useful entry in a number of categories will be prominently displayed on our bit.ly tools page.

The contest runs from now until January 28th [[ UPDATE: new deadline is 11:30pm EST on February 4 ]], and the submission process is dead simple.  Just post a comment to this blog entry containing a succinct description, and a link to the code or project home page.

** Here are the API docs, btw: http://bit.ly/apidocs

kortina posted on January 14, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (View) | Share with Bit.ly Sidebar | new @bitly blog - Announcing the bit.ly API Contest! Tweet & Track