TweetDeck, total restyling coming soon

TweetDeck, total restyling coming soon

TweetDeck

Twitter has confirmed that TweetDeck will undergo a major cosmetic update by the end of the year. The company led by Jack Dorsey could possibly make a paid version with more features. Social network users will be able to access several new features in the future, including Spaces, Revue and Super Follows.

TweetDeck: changes coming

TweetDeck is one of the oldest third-party solutions. which allows you to manage the Twitter profile. It was in fact announced over 12 years ago and in 2011 it was acquired by Twitter. It is available both as a web version and as an app for macOS and Chrome. It can be defined as a "social media dashboard" because it shows the various Twitter contents (posts, messages, notifications, lists, mentions and more) within configurable columns, also allowing the management of multiple accounts.

Over the years, Twitter has added some features already available on the main site and in the mobile apps, but the interface has remained essentially unchanged. During an interview with The Verge, product manager Kayvon Beykpour said the service has been a bit neglected and that a full update is expected by the end of the year.

It is unclear at the moment if it will only made a restyling of the design and if there will be new features. More information on this will arrive over the next few months. According to a Bloomberg report, released about a month ago, Twitter may also offer a subscription version with exclusive features or content.

Source: The Verge



TweetDeck is getting a big overhaul this year from Twitter

TweetDeck is getting a big overhaul this year from Twitter 2

TweetDeck is getting a big overhaul this year from Twitter 2


After Tweetdeck launched in 2009 and Twitter bought it two years later in 2011, the better alternative to Twitter hasn’t had much further development outside of some relatively minor tweaks, updates, and patches along the way. Most of Twitter’s biggest features have been reserved for its core web and mobile apps, resulting in TweetDeck going from being one of the best ways of viewing Twitter feeds into something that looks outdated and light on features. It’s still a great example to the strength of its original design that millions of people prefer using TweetDeck to interact with other people on Twitter.


It appears that Twitter is finally looking to rewarding loyal users as product chief Kayvon Beykpour, in an interview with The Verge, revealed that Twitter is going to be making some pretty big changes in the coming year, with TweetDeck being factored into those plans:


We haven’t given TweetDeck a lot of love recently. That’s about to change; we’ve been working on a pretty big overhaul from the ground up of TweetDeck, and it’s something that we’re excited to share publicly sometime this year. And so that’s just an example of a Twitter-owned and operated service that we will continue investing in. We also, over the last five years, I think, haven’t given a lot of love to our developer ecosystem. A bunch of reasons for that, some missteps that we’d taken in the past, then also sort of prioritization. We are also changing that; in the last year and a half, we’ve really stepped up both our commitment and follow-through on just innovating around the API again, getting the API back to parity from our own internal APIs that we use to build functionality.


I think we’ve got a lot of trusts to earn back with developers since we’ve made a lot of mistakes in the past, but it’s something that we’re actively investing in. We hope we’ll allow developers to build really awesome stuff around the Twitter ecosystem. One of the reasons why Twitter is where it is today is because of developers doing cool shit that we would’ve never thought to do. And so that’s something that we’re trying to do more of, not step away from. More to come on that as well.

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With so much getting posted on Twitter at any given point in time, a tool like TweetDeck is incredibly useful, especially for big news organisations or companies that want to keep abreast of all that information. It’s nice to see that the application will finally start getting some more love, although, without too many details on what those features could be, it’s perhaps still too early for many TweetDeck users to get excited.


Last Updated: March 11, 2021