![]() ![]() TweetDeck for Chrome Mac image taken from Chrome Web Store. Until then, it seems as if Twitter may be very successful in their apparent goal of driving people into the hands of other third-party API accessing Twitter apps and away from the one they spent a lot of money buying, TweetDeck. By removing some of the original features and working more on the main version of the tool, the TweetDeck team can focus on making TweetDeck the. Even though it could seem like Twitter might slowly be killing off the app, that is not the case. If you know a work around for this or simply how to remedy the situation please do let me know! (Suggesting I use a different client isn’t what I’m looking for unless it is one which has sprung up to replace the Adobe AIR version of TweetDeck which Twitter has seemingly abandoned). While you can still use TweetDeck on the Mac and in Chrome, this change for Windows users is notable. When you look in the Chrome Store at the images they show of the app, they show the Mac version which doesn’t seem to suffer from this horrendous waste of space (see above) but at the same time it also doesn’t allow/have more than three columns on a page which is still downright odd. ![]() As someone who detests Twitters default interface, and as a TweetDeck fan, I think the program offers an impressive experience, but I disagree with the 'small app that can fit your pocket thing', at a 168MB it is anything but small. If you try Tweeten and still prefer TweetDeck, it will live on as an app on the. Atomic TweetDeck is an open source Electron app. The latest version – 1.4 – was last updated Apand I don’t use the in Chrome app all that much preferring, at home, to use the old Adobe AIR client (which was last updated before TweetDeck got bought by Twitter and they switched the format of it to a native app.) As far as I can tell, you can’t even make the columns skinnier so as to fit more of them on the screen (which you can do with the old Adobe AIR version of the app). Tweeten is available as a free download for Mac and Windows, and you can get it as a Chrome extension as well. I would love to know why Twitter (which now owns TweetDeck) decided to do this with their client. I have been using TweetDeck for Chrome at work for the past bit and this is one thing that just astounds me about the client. I have no idea why this is, I truly don’t.
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