TweetDeck

TweetDeck is a social media dashboard application for management of Twitter accounts. Originally an independent app, TweetDeck was subsequently acquired by Twitter Inc. and integrated into Twitter's interface.

TweetDeck
TweetDeck Home page
Original author(s)Iain Dodsworth
Developer(s)Twitter Inc.
Initial releaseJuly 4, 2008 (2008-07-04)
Stable release
MacOS3.16.1 / April 19, 2019 (2019-04-19)[1]
Chrome Web Store3.10 / July 18, 2015 (2015-07-18)[2]
PlatformGoogle Chrome, macOS
Size2.9 MB (MacOS), 7.74 KB (Chrome Web Store)
TypeTwitter client
LicenseFreeware
Websitetweetdeck.twitter.com

It is similar to Twitter's "Dashboard App" that was discontinued in 2016.[3]

Like other Twitter applications, it interfaces with the Twitter API to allow users to send and receive tweets and view profiles. It was the most popular Twitter application with a 23% market share as of June 2010, following only the official Twitter website with 45.7% share for posting new status updates.[4]

It can be used as a web app,[5] MacOS app[6] or a Chrome app.[7]

User interface

TweetDeck consists of a series of customisable columns, which can be set up to display the user's Twitter timeline, mentions, direct messages, lists, trends, favorites, search results, hashtags, or all tweets by or to a single user. The client uses Twitter's own automatic and invisible URL shortening whereby a link of any length will only use 23 characters of a Tweet's 280-character limit. All columns can be filtered to include or exclude words or tweets from users. Tweets can be sent immediately or scheduled for later delivery.

Users can monitor multiple accounts simultaneously. For added account security, users signing in with their Twitter username and password can use Twitter's own two-step verification, known to Twitter users as Login Verification.

As of May 2015, TweetDeck added a "confirmation step" feature, giving users the option to require an extra step before sending a tweet.[8] A February 2018 change to the Twitter API restricted the ability of TweetDeck and other third-party applications from sending mass tweets due to concerns over abuse of bots mass posting content and posts. The change also restricts ability of using multiple accounts via the API.[9][10]

Product history

July 4, 2008 – first version of TweetDeck,[11] originally an independent Twitter app by Iain Dodsworth, was released.[12]

June 19, 2009iPhone version released.

May 2010iPad version released.

October 2010Android version made available after a public beta period.

May 25, 2011 – Twitter acquired TweetDeck.

September 15, 2011 – TweetDeck tweeted that new updates for all versions would be released and that "As part of the process of making TweetDeck more consistent with Twitter.com & Twitter's mobile apps, we're removing deck.ly from our apps."[13] Many users expressed their anger at this feature removal in the comments on the iOS and Android Market.[14] Deck.ly previously allowed users to post tweets in excess of 140 characters.

December 8, 2011 – Twitter released a new version branded "TweetDeck by Twitter", as part of Twitter's redesign of its services. TweetDeck changed from an Adobe AIR application to a native Windows and Mac OS X application in this release, introducing a web version of TweetDeck for WebKit-based browsers based on TweetDeck's existing Google Chrome app. The update dropped support for LinkedIn,[15] Google Buzz, Foursquare, MySpace accounts.

March 4, 2013 – TweetDeck announced in a blog post that they would be suspending mobile versions of TweetDeck including TweetDeck AIR, TweetDeck for iPhone and TweetDeck for Android, which were removed from their respective app stores in May. TweetDeck said they would "focus our development efforts on our modern, web-based versions".[16]

May 2, 2013 – Users were informed that 'Facebook is no longer supported in TweetDeck', and Facebook accounts and Facebook columns would be removed on May 7.[17]

July 25, 2013 – at 12:00 PM EDT US, Twitter turned off API v1 which effectively shut down the Android, iOS, and AIR versions of TweetDeck.

December 11, 2013 – Twitter began allowing new TweetDeck users to sign in with their Twitter usernames and passwords, removing the previous barrier-to-entry requiring users to register a separate TweetDeck account. In a blog post, Twitter said "When single sign in is fully available to all current users, we'll also make it possible to seamlessly integrate your current TweetDeck settings and preferences"[18]

June 11, 2014 – A cross-site scripting vulnerability in TweetDeck was discovered, leading to a self-replicating tweet that affected over 83,000 Twitter users.[19]

April 15, 2016 – The Windows App ceased functioning on April 15, 2016.[20][21]

Integration with other social networking services

Originally, as it is now, TweetDeck was aimed towards the Twitter social networking service. Over the years, TweetDeck introduced support for other social networks, but has since removed that support.

On March 16, 2009, a pre-release version was released featuring Facebook status updates integration.[22][23] As of April 8, 2009, Facebook status updates were part of the standard program.[24] From version 0.30 TweetDeck also supported MySpace integration.[25] Version 0.32, released on November 30, 2009, added LinkedIn integration and new Twitter features.[26] In May 2010 TweetDeck also added integration with the Google Buzz and Foursquare social networks.

In 2012 TweetDeck reverted to only supporting Twitter and Facebook, ending support for LinkedIn,[15] MySpace, and the now defunct Google Buzz effective June 2012.

In May 2013, TweetDeck removed support for Facebook accounts.[27]

Variants

All unofficial variants of TweetDeck stopped working in early May 2013 because of more restrictive API version 1.1.[28]

TweetDeck Ltd (company)

A year after launching TweetDeck in 2008, Iain Dodsworth received his initial $300,000 seed funding from The Accelerator Group, Howard Lindzon, Taavet Hinrikus, Gerry Campbell, Roger Ehrenberg, betaworks, Brian Pokorny, and Bill Tai. The company raised a Series A round of funding with many of these same investors, and Ron Conway, Danny Rimer, and the SV Angel group.

On May 25, 2011, TweetDeck was bought by Twitter for £25 million,[29] after a bidding war with Bill Gross's UberMedia.[30]

On January 22, 2013, The American directors of Twitter were sent a letter by Companies House (the United Kingdom Registrar of Companies) warning them that their UK subsidiary company TweetDeck Ltd. was at risk of closure, over missed accounting deadlines.[31] This had no bearing on the product or service which was by then run by Twitter, not by TweetDeck Ltd, which was officially struck off the business register by Companies House, and dissolved, for failure to file accounts for 2011.[32]

gollark: But I'm not sure what I can actually do about that, other than swap out the Warp static file thing for a dumber implementation.
gollark: I think the difference is that the Warp server supports getting ranges, yes.
gollark: I did.
gollark: But *not* the Warp server.
gollark: It works with `python3 -m http.server`.

References

  1. "TweetDeck by Twitter". Mac App Store. Retrieved 2019-04-19.
  2. "TweetDeck by Twitter". chrome.google.com. Retrieved 2015-07-18.
  3. Twitter Blog article from 2016-06-28: Introducing Twitter Dashboard
  4. "Inside Twitter". Sysomos.
  5. "TweetDeck web app". TweetDeck.
  6. "TweetDeck by Twitter". Mac App Store. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  7. "TweetDeck Chrome app". TweetDeck.
  8. Martin Beck (May 11, 2015). "TweetDeck Adds Tweet Confirmation To Help Prevent Social Media Misfires". Marketing Land.
  9. "Twitter is finally working to purge those bots by limiting mass tweets". Digital Trends. 2018-02-21. Retrieved 2018-03-06.
  10. Russell, Jon. "Twitter is (finally) cracking down on bots". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2018-03-06.
  11. "CrunchBase TweetDeck profile".
  12. Halliday, Josh. "Twitter buys UK's TweetDeck for £25m". The Guardian. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  13. "Tweetdeck official Twitter account post 15 Sep 2011".
  14. "Tweetdeck's page on the Android Market". Archived from the original on 2011-09-10.
  15. "Twitter Ends Two-Way Street with LinkedIn".
  16. Laird, Sam. "Twitter Killing TweetDeck for iPhone and Android".
  17. "An update on TweetDeck".
  18. "New users can sign in to TweetDeck using Twitter".
  19. Blue, Violet (June 12, 2014). "TweetDeck wasn't actually hacked, and everyone was silly". ZDNet. Retrieved June 5, 2015.
  20. "Twitter is shutting down TweetDeck for Windows on April 15th | The Verge". Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  21. "Twitter to End Support of TweetDeck App for Windows – Fortune". Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  22. "TweetDeck v0.24 Pre-Release: Facebook Integration".
  23. "Twitter seeks closer integration with Facebook". vnunet. Archived from the original on 2009-03-19.
  24. "Tweetdeck new update".
  25. "Bring your Facebook and MySpace friends closer".
  26. "English (US)".
  27. Pachal, Pete. "TweetDeck Ends Support for Facebook Tuesday". Mashable. Retrieved 2018-04-02.
  28. Twitter finally cancels TweetDeck for Android (and, by association, TweakDeck) – Android – News + Articles. MoDaCo. Retrieved on 2013-08-11.
  29. "Twitter buys UK's TweetDeck for £25m". The Guardian. May 27, 2011.
  30. "Twitter To Buy TweetDeck For a rumored $40 Million – $50 Million". TechCrunch.
  31. "TweetDeck threatened with closure by UK government". Neowin. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  32. "TweetDeck: Twitter's UK Firm Shut By Regulator". Sky news. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
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