5/20/2023 0 Comments Tweetdeck for mobilePlease let us know what you think at And if you love TweetDeck please help us to spread the word about TweetDeck by tweeting and telling your friends about us.The shift of focus for the Tweetdeck team will remove Facebook integration from the apps. For now download it for yourself and try it out and download the new iPhone version from the Apple App Store. Look out for some more in-depth blog posts on each of the key new features in the next few days on our blog and Twitter account. RE (In reference to) tweets – Easily comment on a discussion.Smart filter – Start typing a username to find a person and add them to a group quickly and easily.YFrog - Share and preview YFrog photos inside TweetDeck.‘Reply All’ - Tweet everyone mentioned in a tweet in just a couple of clicks.TweetDeck Recommends column - Find new and interesting people to follow whether you’re a Twitter newbie or a veteran of the Twitterverse.New ‘Block & Report Spam’ button - Just one click will delete the message from view, block the user and report them to Twitter.Video playback - Watch Qik or 12seconds video clips from the comfort of TweetDeck.Conversation window - View an entire dialogue all at once.Here’s a quick list of everything else that you can expect to see in the new desktop version: You’ll be able to run local trends on any of your columns in TweetDeck. Local trends – rather than only being able to see what’s trending on Twitter as a whole, with local trends, you can now see what’s hot among your own friends and colleagues. No more 10 columns limit, now the sky’s the limit. Unlimited columns – you’ll be happy to hear that you can now have as many columns as you’d like on TweetDeck. Whether you’re on the desktop or iPhone we’ve made it simple to see all your columns, for all your accounts and tweet from any account or even cross-post tweets to numerous Twitter accounts at the same time. Multiple account support – you can now have multiple accounts with no need to switch between them. This also means that everything can be backed up in case your computer ever crashes. Sync works in the background so whenever you change a group or add a new search column it’s updated and available on all your computers and your iPhone. Sync – you can automatically synchronise TweetDeck between your desktop and iPhone, making it really simple to import your columns and groups so you can be up and running on iPhone in a matter of minutes – no reinventing the wheel. Second, we’re releasing a new version of TweetDeck for the desktop, with lots of new features that have been in high demand and things like sync that make the iPhone app possible. TweetDeck for iPhone is now available to download free on the Apple App Store. And we’re giving you all of this goodness for free. Browse through columns with the flick of a fingertip, see what’s new as it arrives with notifications and simply shake your iPhone to refresh. And now, we are happy to announce big improvements to TweetDeck, both on and off the desktop.įirst, we are announcing TweetDeck for the iPhone, which means that you can now take all your TweetDeck favourites, including columns, groups and saved searches, everywhere you go. Your support and ideas have helped get TweetDeck to where we are today – building a team in London, constantly improving the product, and trying to change the way people view streamed, real time data from the Web. From our humble beginnings just one year ago, we’ve had such an overwhelming response from you, our users. Today, we’re taking a step closer to that goal. So I started TweetDeck with a focus on Twitter but a bigger vision, to become a new browser for the real-time Web. And today’s browsers aren’t set up to help us filter and digest this new format. More and more, sites are serving consumers streams of information rather than static web pages. Thinking about this I realized that this was an increasing problem across the entire Web – not just with Twitter. When I missed a tweet from one of my real world friends I realised there was no way to weight the importance of people I followed or easily digest the avalanche of information. Twitter provided an amazing new source of information but was already becoming unwieldy. When I started developing TweetDeck, almost a year ago, I was trying to solve a very specific problem.
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