![]() ![]() For example you can backup your tagged Facebook photos in your Dropbox folder by creating the recipe “IF I am tagged in a photo on Facebook THEN I want to add that file to my Dropbox (THAT).” And IFTTT takes all the coding out of it making recipe creation a piece of cake □ Here are my top 10 IFTTT recipes:ġ) When you get a Gmail that you have a new Twitter follower automatically tweet them a welcome messageĢ) Back up my contacts to a Google Spreadsheet: Useful method for backing up your contact list.ģ) When a new book is added to Kindle Top 100 eBooks, send me an emailĤ) When a new book is added to the NY Times Best Sellers List, send me an email: #3 and #4 utilize RSS URLs so the possibilities for this recipe are endless.ĥ) If I star a Gmail, send it to EvernoteĦ) Save the Facebook photos I upload to Dropbox:This is a great way to save the photos you post for your library’s FB account.ħ) Log all of my completed goals (iOS) in a Google Drive spreadsheet: This is a useful way to keep a record of all your completed projects for your yearly reporting.Ĩ) Tweet every YouTube video you favoriteġ0) Create a Facebook status update via text message: This is especially useful for those who have not jumped on the smartphone bandwagon. IFTTT is a free service came out in 2010 and allows you to create and use “recipes” that execute commands online. ![]() If you’ve ever performed an advanced search, run a list in your LMS, forwarded your email to another email carrier, etc then you’ve used an IFTTT statement. It’s pretty much a Boolean search that performs an action in a web application. Ok if you’re a librarian then you’re probably familiar with the statement “if this then that” (IFTTT). ![]()
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