Enter your Steam ID to get a list of your achievements. — Please note that you need to set your "Custom URL" on your steamcommunity.com profile page first! For example, my custom URL is http://steamcommunity.com/id/KneelBeforeZott, so my Steam ID is "KneelBeforeZott". YMMV.
Displays the last 20 achievements for any given EU/US char. Works well as FriendFeed "blog" service, for example. — ATTN: This might be a bit wonky, tho, depending on how responsive both the Armory and the Pipes polling backend currently are.
This pipe will spit out your most recent run logged into nikeplus.nike.com. Just enter any of your "Grab The Link", share-with-your-friends-type URLs from your profile -- for example, go to any run detail page, click "Share" and then "Grab The Link". And make sure your…
[PROOF OF CONCEPT] This Pipe allow you to post a message and (optionally) a link, a comment and up to three images to either your Friendfeed stream or a Friendfeed room. I've built in some countermeasures for double posting, but the Friendfeed API is lagging a bit -- new posts take a few minutes…
This pipe will spit out your most recent run logged into nikeplus.nike.com. Just enter any of your "Grab The Link", share-with-your-friends-type URLs from your profile -- for example, go to any run detail page, click "Share" and then "Grab The Link". And make sure your…
Takes the shared items from my Google Reader account, cleans them up *a lot* so they match my Tumblr posting format. In the end I'll end up with two feeds, one for links (imported in Tumblr as "Links with descriptions") and one for comics and images (imported as "Full text without…
Get the latest podcasts/mixes from Podrunner (http://djsteveboy.com/podrunner.html) and block those that are not in my personal BPM range (which is 140-159 beats per minute).
Reworks any given FriendFeed feed by following the Tumblr and blog links and replacing the FriendFeed items with the full items from the original blog or Tumblr feed.
(A bit of a hackjob, but it works. Didn't want to spend too much time on it.)
The Phoenix Mars Mission blog entries, straight from http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/, with the actual blog entry added to the feed. (Before, it was just the headlines.)