Twitter’s Redesign Makes Photos the Focal Point
Opinions expressed by Âé¶¹Éç contributors are their own.
What do First Lady , the actor , boxer and the rock band all have in common? They are among the very first stars in the Twitterverse to sport the site’s brand new profile design.
Aiming to make it “easier () to express yourself,” Twitter is rolling out revamped profile layouts, the company announced today on its blog.
With larger profile pictures and background images that span the width of an entire page, the outline looks suspiciously like Facebook, many users observed.
Related: Twitter Adds Multiple Photo Option, But Do Brands Care?
Profile information as well as photo and video content now appears in a left-hand column, whereas suggested users and trending topics have been pushed to the right. Rather than a chronological stream, each tweet now appears in its own individual frame.
In addition to the ability to pin tweets to the top of one’s page and filter various types of timelines — just tweets, tweets with photos/videos or tweets and replies — the content that is performing best will be automatically enlarged.
While the new setup is available today to a small group of users — which also includes the Brazilian musician , the and French television host — Twitter will roll out the new features across the board “in the coming weeks.”
Related: How Twitter Is Making it Easier to Travel Back in Time
What do First Lady , the actor , boxer and the rock band all have in common? They are among the very first stars in the Twitterverse to sport the site’s brand new profile design.
Aiming to make it “easier () to express yourself,” Twitter is rolling out revamped profile layouts, the company announced today on its blog.
With larger profile pictures and background images that span the width of an entire page, the outline looks suspiciously like Facebook, many users observed.
Related: Twitter Adds Multiple Photo Option, But Do Brands Care?
Profile information as well as photo and video content now appears in a left-hand column, whereas suggested users and trending topics have been pushed to the right. Rather than a chronological stream, each tweet now appears in its own individual frame.
In addition to the ability to pin tweets to the top of one’s page and filter various types of timelines — just tweets, tweets with photos/videos or tweets and replies — the content that is performing best will be automatically enlarged.
While the new setup is available today to a small group of users — which also includes the Brazilian musician , the and French television host — Twitter will roll out the new features across the board “in the coming weeks.”
Related: How Twitter Is Making it Easier to Travel Back in Time