Blog Links grabs your favourite RSS feeds and produces a list of links for your website. Links to the blog and the most recent post are provided with titles and sorted by date. This is a quick and easy way to add relevant, timely links to numerous sources.
Twitter Widget Pack contains 4 widgets based on the Twitter Widget JavaScript API:
Profile Widget: display your latest tweets in real time
Search Widget: keep track of a common search term or phrase
Lists Widget: show tweets from a list that you (or any other public user) as created
Faves Widget: display only those tweets you have marked as 'favorites'.
These widgets are simple to use and easy to configure. With no back-end interfaces to worry about, this will work on servers that do not have cURL enabled. All data is passed through the client's browser directly to the Twitter website.
This widget allows you easily and simply insert a Google Map into the sidebar of your page.
Simply drag the widget into your list of widgets-in-use for your widget page, then enter:
A map name
Latitude and Longitude Coordinates for the center of your map
Some HTML text for your marker (placed at Lat and Lng entered above)
A Zoom level
Yes to allow users to get directions from the widget, No to disallow this functionality
Then you're good to go!
The widget renders the map in a 300px x 300px square. If "Enable directions" is set to "Yes" then it also renders a mini form with a single text field into which users can enter their source address, and a button that will fire off the directions request.
Directions will be inserted below the map and may require styling.
Each time new directions are requested, the directions panel is cleared and the previous route is removed from the map.
They're easier to create than modules. Start making your own widgets by reading our Guide to making your own widgets. Once you've created and checked your widget, submit it to this directory.