![tweetbot windows phone tweetbot windows phone](https://img.youtube.com/vi/6X5VDJBITAg/0.jpg)
Last but not least, two extremely convenient features of Tweetbot are its streaming capabilities (which allows you to get tweets in real time) and the ability to customize the last two segments of the bottom menu, which provides a lot of flexibility for using the app. The app also allows you easy access to all your Twitter accounts in one tap and offers a vastly larger array of options in its settings. Now that we are talking (writing?) about pictures, Tweetbot ads a very nice touch to the way you see them: Instead of having to tap on any tweet’s attached picture, the app shows you a small thumbnail of it beside its main tweet, so you can get a glimpse beforehand and choose if you still want to tap the picture to view it in full. Swiping any given tweet to the right takes you immediately to the related conversation, while at the top of your timeline, you are able to switch between a common timeline display and one that shows only those tweets that have pictures. The Gear icon in particular offers some very interesting options, including the extremely convenient Translate, which, as you might guess, lets you read foreign tweets in your own language. Tapping on tweets displays several options, allowing you to reply to them, retweet them, mark them as favorites, share them and more. While definitely not as clean-looking or simple as the official Twitter app, Tweetbot for iPhone ($2.99) offers a wide array of options, which are relatively easy to manage thanks to an intuitive interface. We already saw how fun this feature can be with Twitter’s own #music app, and it looks just as effective with its main app. Lastly, a very nice, unique feature of the official Twitter app is the ability to discover Twitter accounts that might interest you.
#TWEETBOT WINDOWS PHONE FULL#
Tapping on tweets gives you their full view and also shows you the number of replies they have, while swiping them from left to right allows you to reply, retweet them, mark them as favorites and more. This simplicity comes at a cost though: The app’s options, while not lacking, are definitely a bit limited, but provide all the basics for any Twitter user.
![tweetbot windows phone tweetbot windows phone](https://applesencia.com/files/2013/10/tweetbot-ios7.jpg)
The app offers a very streamlined look at all your Twitter feeds, and videos and images attached to them.
![tweetbot windows phone tweetbot windows phone](https://cdn.cultofmac.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/IMG_0009-2.jpg)
If there is one word to describe the official Twitter app, it would be “simple”. That means there’s huge growth potential for the entire industry and no particular reason to think that the device side window of opportunity is closing.This time, we’ll take a look at Tweetbot and at how it compares to the official Twitter app for iOS. The thing a lot of the commentary on the smartphone market seems to me to miss is that the vast majority of mobile phones in use in America today, and an even larger share of mobile phones in most other markets, are still non-smart “feature” phones. But this all hinges on issues that are more ground level than the question of whether or not Microsoft can induce someone to generate a usable Instapaper ripoff. If they are, the user base will grow and you’ll find there are plenty of good aps. Either Windows Phone’s core functions + the hardware it runs on + the deals the carriers offer will be a good value proposition to consumers or they won’t be. Beyond that, the key things you need for a platform to get off the ground are cooperation from a handful of established firms-Amazon, Netflix, Hulu, and the like-who all seem to me to be willing to play ball. But that’s not a question of the size of the user base it’s just a question of whether or not Microsoft’s in-house developers are any good. It’s obviously true that if Microsoft can’t put a good web browser, a good email client, a good media player, a good calender, and a good camera on its phone then it’s going to be in trouble. Most of these are just the basic stock elements of the phone. My iPhone usage consists overwhelmingly of just a handful of aps, most of all the Safari browser, the Email client, a Twitter client (current Tweetbot), Google Maps, iCal, Weather, Music, the Camera, and the Kindle ap. This is an argument I’ve mostly seen touted by iOS fans, but as a long-time Apple guy myself I have some doubts. And to get apps, it has to compete for developer time and money with platforms that make money, either directly or by advertising.” Lots of people seem to think so: “This is why Windows Phone 7 is screwed.