Open source MURLS submits links to multiple shorteners
Still concerned about whether or not your favorite URL shortening service is going to go belly-up and leave you with a pile of broken links? Hedge your bets with MURLS.
The tiny, portable application is plugged in to 28 different services including popular ones like bit.ly, tr.im, is.gd, and tinyurl. Each shortener is selectable in the MURLS options screen, so you can create as few or as many truncated links as you please.
Just double-click any URL in the list view and it's copied to your clipboard for easy pasting into Twitter updates or anywhere else you need to send abbreviated links. By default, the app sorts created links by length - shortest links first.
MURLS can definitely be a useful little app for link sharer -- I just hope this doesn't lead to Twitter updates with a dozen shortened links crammed into the 140.
The tiny, portable application is plugged in to 28 different services including popular ones like bit.ly, tr.im, is.gd, and tinyurl. Each shortener is selectable in the MURLS options screen, so you can create as few or as many truncated links as you please.
Just double-click any URL in the list view and it's copied to your clipboard for easy pasting into Twitter updates or anywhere else you need to send abbreviated links. By default, the app sorts created links by length - shortest links first.
MURLS can definitely be a useful little app for link sharer -- I just hope this doesn't lead to Twitter updates with a dozen shortened links crammed into the 140.













Comments
4
Subscribe to commentsSpedioneSep 16th 2009 4:41PM
You misspelled "sharer". You typed "sharesr".
Just a little FYI
Grant RobertsonSep 16th 2009 8:23PM
Does shortening something 28 times make it any better than once? I mean, it's not like you're going to paste all 28 urls into that historic Twitter post, are you?
Ok, so shortened links threaten the long term inter-linking nature of things on the web. But, isn't it all pretty ephemeral anyway? It's not like I'm using short links in a medical journal or, a thesis.
Lee MathewsSep 16th 2009 8:36PM
But...Well, 28 half decent cookies is still a lot of cookies.
I'm not convinced of the relevance, I just wish I had some good cookies.
Gregory BeauregardSep 18th 2009 7:15AM
It isn't meant to shorten 28 URLs every time for every person. They are simply all enabled by default to show off functionality, expose some good shorteners that you may not have known about previously, and to make a comparison of the current length of popular URL shorteners to other ones currently available. I usually only leave 2-3 of my favorite shorteners enabled in case one is down or if another domain happens to float my boat at that time.