Form for saving bookmarks that looks like the delicious.com form.
Save a new notice with the right text, but attach a new notice_bookmark
table which marks this as a bookmark. Tags, URLs are kept the same.
Fixes for Twitter bridge breakage on 32-bit servers. New "Snowflake" 64-bit IDs have become too big to fit in the integer portion of double-precision floats, so to reliably use these IDs we need to pull the new string form now.
Machines with 64-bit PHP installation should have had no problems (except on Windows, where integers are still 32 bits)
Conflicts:
plugins/TwitterBridge/twitterimport.php <- as this hasn't been broken out, the import code is NOT FULLY UPDATED HERE.
Some of our caching systems, like the disk cache or memcached, have
significant overhead (network connections or disk I/O).
This plugin adds an additional layer of in-process cache, so we don't
need to reconnect to external cache systems when we've already
received a data item from the cache. There are some concurrency issues
here, but typically they won't be important at the level of a single
web hit.
Piwik's current default recommended JS for loading creates a <script> tag via document.write(). In addition to being generally evil, this means the browser doesn't know it's going to need piwik.js until that chunk of script gets executed... which can't happen until all scripts referenced *before* it have been loaded and executed.
The only reason for that bit of script though seems to be to pick 'http' or 'https' depending on the current page's scheme. This can be done more simply by using a protocol-relative link (eg "//piwik.status.net/piwik.js"), which the browser will resolve as appropriate. Since it's now sitting in the <script> tag, the browser's lookahead code will now see it and be able to start loading it while earlier things are parsing/executing.
May be better still to move to an asynchronous load after DOM-ready, but I'm not sure if that'll screw with the analytics code (eg, not being able to start things on the DOM-ready events since they're past).