It adds new features and keeps me hooked, even with it’s new subscription model. Needless to say, in my book, Tweetbot 6 is getting 4/4 stars from me. Granted, I have not seen this done with every single article posted on Twitter, but I have seen it on some which is a nice change. Lastly, I like that the app shows links from articles posted from websites, even if the media entity did not upload the image along with the tweet. It’s not the fault of Tapbots, but more so the fault of the current Twitter API that doesn’t let them take advantage of prompt notifications for Tweetbot users. Twitter did restrict this feature in an API change a couple of years ago, so I personally have Twitter and Tweetbot 6 on my iPhone and iPad to get those on-time notifications. Where the app does have problems is when it comes to on-time notifications. The app basically takes most of the good parts of Twitter and gets rid of the bad an unnecessary ones, such as Moments, ads before tweets with videos in them, promoted tweets and Twitter’s newest feature, Fleets. You get all of your tweets in the order they came in with no ads. However, what makes this app shine even more is it does not have any sponsored or promoted tweets in it. What has always drawn me to Tweetbot, which is another reason I love its sixth incarnation, is it has all of my tweets in a chronological order and has a beautiful UI to show it off. The top one for me is being able to view polls and see the results of them in the Twitter app, and I now can see pinned tweets. What makes the app shine is some other new features. The new app icon is a nice addition to the app. Yes, you can use the app without its premium features, but that only enables you to read the tweets and not be able to post tweets.Īs for the look of the app, even though I already liked Tweetbot 5’s look and feel, this app is certainly an upgrade, even if it is a minimal one. Right now, you can get Tweetbot 6 Premium for either $0.99 a month or $5.99 a year. Specifically, the app goes from a one-time purchase to a yearly subscription model. With all of that said, Tweetbot 6 was released last week and is set to be an app that changes the game for itself and its developers, Tapbots. There has not been a day where I have not had or used it on my iPhone, iPod Touch (when I used those), iPad or MacBook Pro. It’s available for iPhone and iPod touch only.A post shared by David Becker forward nearly nine years later, I still use the app every single day. If you want a beautifully designed iOS7 app, and you are a power Twitter use it, buy it now on sale at $2.99 rather than when it’s $4.99. Side by side, the old Tweetbot does look very dated.įeatures of the app include background content refresh, drafts (displays how many pending), media timeline, custom services (Cloudapp, Droplr, Pocket, Pinboard), inline notifications, timeline sync (iCloud) and WiFi streaming. If you go into your DMs, it’s very similar to the iMessage interface. Profile view appears in a dark grey, with a quick glance of recent photos. I’m still getting used to the round avatars.
#TWEETBOT WINDOWS PHONE WINDOWS#
The whole iOS7 inspired look reminds me of what apps look like on Windows Phone, which feels like it fits into the operating system, with no “border”. A single tap on an avatar takes you into a profile.
![tweetbot windows phone tweetbot windows phone](https://coderlessons.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/fenix.jpg)
Pressing and holding an avatar brings up options to DM, mute, unfollow, disable retweets and manage list memberships.
![tweetbot windows phone tweetbot windows phone](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/5c/82/12/5c82123c9fd06d8689ae9835da1d2715.jpg)
A quick swipe to the right brings details, and a thread view. In timeline view, you tap a tweet and it becomes black, with options appearing below: reply, retweet, favourite, copy and details. All its core features are there it just looks different.Īt the bottom you will still see 5 main tabs: timeline, replies, DMs, and two customisable options of search, profile, mute filters, favourites, lists and retweets. Gone are the grey top and bottom borders, replaced with a fresh white background and very minimalistic icons. The most noticeable change is the look, it’s iOS7 inspired – very minimal with round avatars, and white everything. This will probably annoy quite a few users who already bought the app, but I think if you are a power Twitter user, you won’t mind paying for it. It’s currently on sale at $2.99 and will normally sell for $4.99. It’s a new app built from the ground up for iOS7, which means you have to buy it (again).
![tweetbot windows phone tweetbot windows phone](https://cdn.mobilesyrup.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/DSC00137-300x199.jpg)
#TWEETBOT WINDOWS PHONE UPDATE#
Tweetbot 3 for iPhone was released on Friday, 25 October and to clarify, it’s not an update to Tweetbot.