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Tweetbot 3 ends support
Tweetbot 3 ends support






  1. Tweetbot 3 ends support archive#
  2. Tweetbot 3 ends support full#

Extensions can only be activated from the share sheet, and Tapbots can’t add a URL preview to it as it can’t be modified by apps. I used that feature all the time to understand if URLs were worth opening or not, and it’s gone in Tweetbot 3.5.

Tweetbot 3 ends support full#

If you tap & hold a long URL in the timeline, the contextual menu will intelligently resize the URL’s text to make it smaller so that you’ll be able to read the full URL without cut-off parts. Here’s one minor design detail that I mentioned in my review of Tweetbot 3: That, of course, comes with some trade-offs. Tweetbot has always been better than Twitter’s own app for opening webpages thanks to non-modal web views, but extensions take Tapbots’ app to the next level for processing tweets and links. I can tweet with Linky’s tweet panel inside Tweetbot if I want – a testament to the democratization of app features that extensions bring to iOS 8. If you follow recipe blogs, you could use the AnyList extension to save recipes to your account without leaving the app.

Tweetbot 3 ends support archive#

With extensions available in my Twitter timeline, I can quickly save links to Pinner, archive them in Evernote, and even pin Twitter photos to Pinterest – tap & hold a tweet with photos, bring up the Pinterest extension, and it’ll scan the tweet for images.Īny read-later app can now be integrated natively with Tweetbot thanks to the share sheet. In testing Tweetbot 3.5, I’ve noticed that I now tend to use Twitter favorites less as temporary bookmarks and more as real favorites for tweets I like.

tweetbot 3 ends support

I turned Twitter favorites into an inbox because it was hard to share links quickly on iOS. Over the years, I developed a habit of marking tweets I found interesting as favorites so I could later go through all of them and manually bookmark them on Pinboard, add them to Evernote, or save them to other apps. Tweetbot featured support for Instapaper, but its integrations stopped at read-later services. I discover apps, products, and great reads thanks to Twitter, but neither the old Tweetbot or Twitter’s app allowed me to act on those links right away with no friction. I probably spend too much time on Twitter, but I can’t deny that the people and websites I follow give me a consistent amount of interesting links I use for articles, MacStories Weekly, and podcasting.

tweetbot 3 ends support

Every time you tap & hold a tweet/link or hit the share icon in your timeline or a web view, Tweetbot 3.5 will open the iOS 8 share sheet. With iOS 8, Tapbots has decided to fully embrace extensions (abandoning the custom contextual menu they had built for Tweetbot 3) by switching to Apple’s share sheet for action and share extensions. What’s changing today in Tweetbot is the action menu for tweets and links. The app hasn’t changed considerably – it has evolved in expected ways and within the limitations imposed by Twitter’s API for third-party apps. Unfortunately, third-party apps can’t access the quick reply feature found in Apple’s Messages app: like Twitter, tapping the Reply button in a notification won’t let you reply immediately but it’ll take you to Tweetbot instead.įrom a visual perspective, Tweetbot 3.5 looks and works the same, keeping the foundation that Tapbots introduced with Tweetbot 3 last year. Tweetbot 3.4 is available on the App Store.Tweetbot 3.5 looks great on the iPhone 6, and its new notifications allow me to quickly mark a tweet as favorite without opening the app.

tweetbot 3 ends support

Similarly, a longstanding annoyance of Tweetbot’s media previews has been fixed, as now you’ll no longer accidentally tap on Instagram thumbnails that turn out to be videos thanks to a proper video indicator. This was one of the points that I brought up in my original review of Tweetbot 3, and I’m glad that it’s been added. On a user’s profile view, tap an image, and Tweetbot will show the tweet that contained that photo, allowing you to reopen the tweet. Until Twitter enables the feature, however, multiple photos won’t show up in search or a streaming timeline – which is the reason why you won’t see an indicator for multiple photos until you open an individual tweet.Ī minor change that I like is the possibility of viewing corresponding tweets for recent images from a Twitter user. The implementation is easy to use and well done if I had to nitpick, I’d say that it would be nice to select four images from the image library at once, without having to perform the action four times. You can tap the stack to reveal all the photos you’re including in a tweet, tapping on a single one to get a bigger preview and a remove button. When composing tweet, you can attach multiple images (up to four) simply by adding them to a tweet, and they will show up as a stack of photos in the compose box. In Tweetbot 3.4, multiple images can be viewed by swiping on a tweet that contains multiple attachments in the detail view as well as the full-screen image preview.








Tweetbot 3 ends support