

Albatross
A Twitter live-data collector.
Cost / License
- Free
- Open Source
Platforms
- Self-Hosted
- Docker

Albatross
Features
- Data visualization
Tags
- data-collection
- live-data
Albatross News & Activities
Recent activities
Albatross information
What is Albatross?
What is This?
This project is largely an experiment that may one day grow into something useful for more than just a handful of people.
The idea is simple: Albatross is a way for you to capture everything said about something and then analyse the raw data yourself or let this site visualise it for you.
Say you're at a conference that's managing the conversation with the hashtag: #awesomeconference. You're participating when you can, but it would be really nice to be able to collect everything everyone said during the conference and draw some conclusions from it.
Maybe you want to do some analytics based on some natural language processing, or want to chart the number of times a particular phrase was mentioned within that hashtag. Whatever you want to do with the data, just fill out the form here with the hashtag in question, hit submit and when the conference ends, you've got all the data to play with.
Similarly this can be used for international events, or national disaster coverage. Plot on a map the tweets posted about your subject and when, or analyse the content of the tweets to see what different regions are saying about a particular subject.
Can You Do That For Me?
Analytics and visualisation is hard, and not everyone has the time or inclination to figure out how to parse the JSON blobs Twitter makes available via their API. Thankfully, Albatross has a bunch of built-in visualisations that might be sufficient for many people, but if you need something more customised, you can open an issue and I can give it a shot. Of course, contributions are welcome!
Data Format
The raw data is available as a xzip-compressed "fjson" file. This is just a plain text file, with one JSON object per line. You can decompress this file in Linux & Mac with the xz utility, or use a common program like WinRar in Windows.