Automate the Web Using IFTTT: Useful Recipes to get you started
A relatively new web service, IFTTT
(If This Then That) lets you automate tasks between other popular
services such as Dropbox, Twitter, Evernote, Facebook, Instapaper, and
many others. IFTTT works by telling it what task you want carried out,
what will trigger this task, and it will put it into action for you.
Channels, triggers, actions, ingredients, recipes... these are some
of the terms used by IFTTT, and although it may seem complicated at
first glance, it’s actually extremely easy to use.
Here’s a practical example in case the whole concept doesn't ring a bell yet...
Say I want to keep up with how a certain country is doing in the London 2012 Olympics.
First, I enable the ESPN channel and immediately I’ll be asked to set a
trigger from a number of predetermined options. In this case I’ll
choose “new Olympic medal by country”. Next, I’ll specify which country
to follow and create the trigger. That’s the ‘If This’ part.
You’ll need to choose a channel for the second portion of your recipe.
Since I want to be notified by SMS I’ll choose that channel -- though
you can do a number of other things like automatically posting it on
social networks or your personal calendar. After activating the SMS
channel I’ll choose the ‘Send me an SMS’ action and configure the
message to my liking. That’s the ‘Then That’ part.
The resulting recipe is shown with a self-explanatory graphic along with options to share it publicly.
The process is very easy to follow on IFTTT's site. There are
currently fifty different channels, including social networks,
essentials like email and RSS feeds, and even Belkin’s WeMo devices to
bring IFTTT tasks to the physical world. IFTTT’s tagline is “Put the
internet to work for you” and that’s exactly what it does.
Of course, you don't have to create all tasks from the ground up, as
there are already countless of useful recipes being shared. I've
hand-picked a few of my favorites and created a handful others to get
you started.
Freebies and Deals
Receive daily PC game deals via email, IM (Google Talk), or SMS.
The deals are sourced from steamgamesales.com’s RSS feed and include
data from 9 different stores. Optionally, you can set an alert for
whenever a specific game gets a discount and receive it via email, IM, SMS.
Get Amazon’s daily Gold Box deals by email, IM, or SMS.
If you’re annoyed with too many alerts that are uninteresting to you
try creating your own recipe using a specific keyword such as SSD or
LCD, for example. Just use Feed as the trigger with the URL http://rssfeeds.s3.amazonaws.com/goldbox.
Get notified of Apple’s official free app of the week via email, IM, or SMS. If you are an Android user, there’s also a recipe for Amazon’s Appstore free app of the day notifications by email, IM or SMS.
Backing up and Social Networks
Automatically send starred tweets containing links to Instapaper
to catch up reading later (note: many Twitter clients already include a
‘send to Instapaper’ option but it may come in handy if you use the
official client or web interface.) A similar recipe is available for starred items in Google Reader.
Automatically send every Facebook photo you’re tagged in to your Dropbox
folder. This recipe serves both as a backup and a way to ensure that
any photos attached to your name will be accessible to you at all times,
even after it’s been deleted from Facebook. You’ll need to sync your
Facebook and Dropbox accounts.
Save all Instagram photos to Dropbox.
Similar to the IFTTT recipe above, this one will help Instagram users
keep a local backup of all their faux vintage photos by synchronizing
them with Dropbox.
Archive your Foursquare check-ins to Google Calendar.
Although I’m not a huge fan of check-in based social networks, this one
can come in handy while traveling if you want to keep a log of the
places you’ve been to -- landmarks, restaurants, and so on -- all with
their respective dates on your calendar.
Synchronize your Twitter profile picture with Facebook’s.
This one is self explanatory and it basically will save you the extra
steps to update your Twitter profile picture by using Facebook’s
whenever it changes.
Others
Text to escape.
Need an excuse to run away from a boring or awkward situation? This
recipe lets you trigger a customized phone call to your cell by sending a
text message to IFTTT. You can customize the phone call message or
create multiple messages triggered for different situations. Only US
numbers are supported.
Wake-up call. This recipe lets you schedule a call to your phone at a specific time and day of the week.
Text weather. There are a number of weather-related recipes on IFTTT, you can choose to get the weather every morning by SMS, for example, or just a warning to let you know it will rain or snow.
Other popular services that are available as channels that we didn't mention here include Blogger, Gmail, Flickr, LastFM, YouTube, Wordpress, among others.
Considering you also get to play with RSS feeds, you can potentially
create automated tasks for any given website. As before, if you want to
create your own recipe you can later share that with other users on the
site or borrow existing ones.
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