brownymasterThe publication date is the game time (pubDate). If you have a decent RSS parser, it can convert it to your local timezone.
I don't see anything but the title and the description, I guess it's a limitation of Google Reader?
Account Details | |
---|---|
SteamID64 | 76561197960463853 |
SteamID3 | [U:1:198125] |
SteamID32 | STEAM_0:1:99062 |
Country | United States |
Signed Up | July 23, 2012 |
Last Posted | February 10, 2013 at 6:44 PM |
Posts | 6 (0 per day) |
Game Settings | |
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In-game Sensitivity | 0.9 |
Windows Sensitivity | 3/10 |
Raw Input | 1 |
DPI |
1200 |
Resolution |
1920x1080 |
Refresh Rate |
60Hz |
Hardware Peripherals | |
---|---|
Mouse | Logitech G500 |
Keyboard | Logitech K520 |
Mousepad | |
Headphones | Sennheiser PC150 |
Monitor | Samsung SyncMaster 2494 |
brownymasterThe publication date is the game time (pubDate). If you have a decent RSS parser, it can convert it to your local timezone.
I don't see anything but the title and the description, I guess it's a limitation of Google Reader?
Thanks again enigma!! Just one more request.. could you add the time to the feed? Right now we see the event title and the description but IMO the time is more important than the description! For example, it could look like:
[title]ESEA-Invite: bp vs Xensity[/title]
[body]Thursday, 7 February, 2013 ⋅ 11:00 PM EST (NA) ⋅ 05:00 CET (EU) ⋅ 14:00 EST (AU)
Xensity's season might ...
Or however you want to do it.
It would be awesome if I could track every new event added to the Schedule via RSS!
thanks enigma! hmm, it seems that only video OR chat can be popped out, but not both at the same time. this can be done in the twitch site. any ideas?
The only feature missing from the Twitch site is video pop out. Is this an easy addition?