I have set of data points(co-ordinate) according to time for a particular journey. Is there any api which can detect whether in that particular journey user has driven vehicle in wrong way or not. I have already used MapMyIndia Api, but it could not give the required result.
Related
I am trying to find an API similar to https://plaid.com/ that allows users to connect to multiple brokerages and return security holding information. The issue with Plaid seems to be that they only provide updates once a day and I am looking for something more "real time."
Has anyone come across another service like this that provides up-to-date information on your portfolio?
I am trying to use Azure Maps API. It will be nice to have route information which should include the locations of course and a speed profile. As you can understand speed profile is not an east one. Free flow speed profile is ok. But we want to simulate real-world conditions meaning that we want to select date and time of departure to get accurate speed information as close to as possible to a real world traffic influence.
Is there any feature that Azure provide this? If not, which API can provide this
I don't have any code at this moment to show since ı don't know which API to use.
Historical traffic data is not currently available in Azure Maps but is being investigated as a potential future feature.
For my project in college I have decided to make an interactive map where, when the user hovers over a country the title of the top song in that country is displayed. I wanted to get that title from Spotify charts.
I have read every single page of the Spotify API guide and I am still confused as to how should I write the query in processing. I have the authorisation code and the OAuth token, but I'm not sure how should I include it in the actual sketch.
I really need all the help I can get, I am very new to this and I will appreciate every bit of advice.
Use a Spotify API Java Wrapper such as this one to handle API requests to Spotify.
Wrappers are external libraries that simplify API interfacing by providing functions that you can call from your code to make API requests. See this webpage for information about including external libraries in Processing sketches if you haven't done this before.
The most-played track per country isn't likely to change during operation of your program so requesting (it seems you've identified the correct API endpoint for this) the top track for each country just once is sufficient. This process could be done in setup(), for example, since it runs once only.
Then it's a matter of storing the data from these requests in some sort of data structure to allow your program to retrieve the most played track of the country that is being hovered over. A HashMap of country name to top track is appropriate, but there are many viable approaches.
I have a project where I'm required to predict future user location so that we can provide him with location specific services as well as collect data from his device that would be used to provide a service for another user etc...
I have already developed an android app that collects some data but as social media is the richest in terms of information, I would like to make use of that. For example, if the user checks in in a restaurant and gives it a good review (on fb for example) then he is likely to go back there. Or if he tweets a negative tweet about a place then he is unlikely to go back there... these are just examples I thought of.
So my main issue is: how do I even get access to that information? I mean it's not like the user is going to send me a copy of every social media activity they have so how do I get it and is that even possible? Because I know fb, twitter and other social medias have security policies so I initially thought it couldn't be done and that only facebook gets access to their users' information to predict their likes and dislikes and show them adds and sponsored posts accordingly but when googling it, I found a lot of tools that claim to be able to provide that sort of data. How did they even acquire it and is it possible for me to do the same?
Facebook, Twitter, etc. have well-documented APIs that may or may not allow you to access the data.
For the APIs, see the official documentation of each, because anything I write here will likely be outdated in a year or two, as their APIs change.
Don't rely on web scraping. The web sites change design more often than the API, and you will likely violate the terms-of-service.
I'd like to know how to create an API call to the Steam web API in order to retrieve all the relevant data for a specified game. I found an example call that almost does what I need, except this call requires you to know the Steam app ID as you can see below:
http://store.steampowered.com/api/appdetails/?appids=730
As you can see if you click on the link, all the information I need is returned with the API call. However I'd like to know if it's possible to modify this API call so that it returns the required information using the game name rather than the Steam ID number?
Unfortunately I don't think this is possible (although the lack of official documentation of the API means I may be wrong).
Firstly, from a design perspective it probably wouldn't work - games could have the same name and so name is not a unique enough reference to identify an item (which is a fundamental concept of a correctly designed REST API).
Secondly, all examples (such as this here) I have come across on the web of people self-documenting the API use appID to identify a game/software and have found no cases of being able to use name. The other documented Steam DEV APIs also use AppId