Want to know which is the best desktop app for Twitter. Read this detailed review and comparison of the most popular Twitter apps for Windows desktop with screenshot images. Covers both Adobe AIR clients and native Windows apps.
Twitter’s popularity has spurred the development of countless high-quality apps that let you use Twitter from the web, desktop or even your mobile phone.
Twitter Desktop Apps for Windows
Here are some of the best programs that will help you use Twitter from your Windows desktop* – you can download any of them for free and they’re all under active development. These are dedicated desktop apps for Twitter and therefore you won’t find any widgets or browser add-ons for Twitter here.
[*] Some of the Twitter clients mentioned here are based on Adobe AIR so
you may use them on Linux and Mac as well. Let’s dive in.
TweetDeck – The powerhouse
One of the most popular Twitter apps,
TweetDeck is great for managing all your favorite social services including Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and MySpace from one place. Its multicolumn interface not only allows you to keep up with all your social accounts but also with Twitter lists and any custom searches that you may have saved inside Twitter.
With TweetDeck, you can see a very detailed profile of any Twitter user, you can follow (or unfollow) users and even put them in any of your Twitter lists. TweetDeck supports inline translation so you can easily read foreign language tweets that may appear in your Timeline or search results.
If you work across multiple computers, you can setup an account at TweetDeck and that will save you from the hassle of having to configure Tweetdeck on every single computer. And if you are no big fan of Twitter’s retweet function, you can opt for the classic version of “retweet” (RT).
Seesmic for Windows App
Launched during Microsoft PDC ’09,
Seesmic for Windows is a beautiful desktop client for Twitter with a slightly translucent and tabbed interface.
Like TweetDeck, Seesmic for Windows can handle multiple Twitter accounts – you can get a combined timeline or look at your @replies, direct messages and sent messages for individual accounts separately. You can post the same update /link /photo to one or more Twitter account simultaneously.
The current version is only a preview version but you can expect to see more features as its development progresses. This is a native Windows application and doesn’t require Adobe AIR.
Seesmic Desktop for AIR
Seesmic Desktop is the original Adobe AIR powered Seesmic app, and it works with Twitter as well as Facebook (including Facebook Pages).
With Seesmic Desktop, you can mark individual tweets as spam, follow new people and unfollow (or even block) other people from your timeline. When sharing images on Twitter, you can either upload images from the desktop or capture a picture right from your webcam.
Although Seesmic Desktop will run on any operating system, it uses a Mac OS style UI which doesn’t look that good on a Windows desktop. The best part about Seesmic Desktop is its support for Facebook Pages – you can post new messages or even moderate comments on pages that you own.
Twhirl from Seesmic
Twhirl is a quick and easy-to-use Twitter client with a minimal yet beautiful UI. You can even choose your own color schemes and font styles for the UI.
Unlike heavy-weights like Seesmic or TweetDeck, Twhirl doesn’t offer loads of features but if all you need is a way to quickly post status updates on your Twitter timeline, this could be a good choice.
Twirl also offers integration with other less-common networks such as identi.ca and FriendFeed, and lets you cross-post updates to other social networks via Ping.fm. Twhirl is from Seesmic, the same company the develops previously mentioned Seesmic Desktop for AIR and Seemsmic for Windows.
Destroy Twitter
DestroyTwitter, an Adobe AIR powered Twitter desktop client, is again very popular for its minimalistic but innovative interface.
The unique thing about Destroy Twitter is its support for themes – you can either download
ready-made themes or use the online theme-builder to create one that matches your taste.
DestroyTwitter uses impressive transitions when switching from one screen to another and it’s probably the only desktop client that lets you edit your own Twitter profile. Then there’s support for Twitter trends so that you can know what’s hot on Twitter without having to visit the Twitter site.
Destroy Twitter is lightweight and extremely fast. You can also configure the application so that it
always stays on top of other applications.
Sobees for Windows
Sobees offers a fresh interface and allows you to choose your own layout for different social services. Sobees includes an anti-spam feature that will let you block certain words from appearing in your Twitter stream.
You can run Sobees on any Windows computer as long as it has .NET installed. Go
here to check whether or not you have the required software on your computer.
Blu (Native Windows Twitter Client)
Blu for Windows in one word is beautiful. Powered by WPF, Blu showcases your Twitter timeline inside an animated and colorful interface.
With Blu, you can reply to your Tweets inline so you don’t lose then current view. Then you can scroll unlimitedly so you can easily see older tweets without having to click anything (just like image search in Bing).
But the best part is this – if you see a message in your Twitter stream that is in reply to another tweet, you can click this message to see the original tweet that started the whole conversation.
Blu doesn’t support multiple Twitter accounts, you cannot follow your lists in Blu, there’s no option to search tweets yet it’s impressive.
Mixero for AIR
AIR powered
Mixero is aimed at reducing noise and making it easier for you to keep track of updates that could be more important to you.
It offers advanced filtering so you can hide spammers from your Twitter stream (based on usernames or even stop-words), and lets you arrange those you follow into groups that are integrated with Twitter lists. You can preview images from Twitpic, Flickr, YouTube video frames, etc. directly in your timeline.
A very unique feature in Mixero is “Conversations” – you can click the bubble (speech) icon next to any tweet to find all other previous tweets that may part of that conversation. You can detach windows from the Mixero app and arrange them anywhere on the desktop as shown in the screenshot above.
SharedMinds Desktop
The interface of
SharedMinds Desktop for Windows is inspired by Outlook 2007 – you can even change themes from Sliver to Blue as in Microsoft Office. The similarity doesn’t end here – you navigate tweets just like you move across records in an Access database.
Related:
More Outlook Add-ins for Social Networking
What’s unique about SharedMinds Desktop is the integrated browser – if there’s a link inside a tweet, you can read the corresponding web page directly inside the Twitter client without having to launch a separate tab in your browser. However, you cannot share pictures and other files with this app.
Open Source Twitter Clients
Spaz,
DigiTweet and
Witty are some of the well know Twitter desktop apps that are open source as well. Spaz requires Adobe AIR which Witty and digiTweet are native Windows’ Apps.
Finally, which is best desktop app for Twitter?
Well, it depends. If you are looking for a simple app that can help you send and receive tweets from the desktop without any bells-and-whistles, check out DestroyTwitter or Twhirl. If you are looking for something simple yet stylish, Blue is a good choice.
Seesmic for Windows sports an impressive interface but it is missing important features (like support for saved searches) so you should wait for their next release. If you want to manage both your Facebook pages and Twitter accounts from the desktop, Seesmic Desktop is an ideal client for you. For everyone else, TweetDeck is a perfect choice.
Quick Comparison of Twitter Desktop Apps
This table shows the main features of each of the Twitter apps covered above.
Please note that most of the native Windows Twitter apps mentioned here require .NET 3.5 or newer, so they will only run on Windows XP or newer. Adobe Air based Twitter apps will run on Windows 2000 and newer, as well as Mac OS X 10.4 and newer and modern Linux distros.
Twitter Software | Supported Services | Does the App requires Adobe AIR? | Support for Multiple Twitter accounts? | Support for Twitter Lists | Supported media sharing sites* |
TweetDeck | Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace | Yes | Yes | Yes | TweetPhoto, TwitPic, YFrog, TweetShrink |
Seesmic Desktop | Twitter, Facebook | Yes | Yes | Yes | Posterous, TwitPic, Twitgoo, yfrog |
Seesmic for Windows | Twitter | No | Yes | Yes | Twitpic, YFrog |
twhirl | Twitter, identi.ca, Friendfeed | Yes | Yes | No | YFrog |
DestroyTwitter | Twitter | Yes | No | No | TweetPhoto, Twitgoo, TwitPic, Posterous, yFrog, TwitDoc, TweetShrink |
Sobees lite | Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn | No | Yes | Yes | TweetShrink, TwitPic |
Blu | Twitter | No | No | No | TwitPic |
Mixero | Twitter, Facebook | Yes | Yes | Yes | TwitPic, YFrog, Posterous, TweetShrink |
SharedMinds Desktop | Twitter | No | Yes | No | None |
[*] Here are some popular file hosting sites that are integrated with most of these Twitter Desktop Apps:
1.
TwitDoc lets you share files and document on Twitter. Supports PDF, Office documents, video clips and graphic images.
2.
TweetShrink is for shaving off those few extra letters off a tweet that has exceeded the 140 character maximum. For instance, “I am fine. How are you doing?” becomes “i’m fine. How R U doing?” thus saving you space for 5 more letters.
3.
Twitgoo,
yfrog,
TwitPic,
TweetPhoto are some popular hosting services for sharing photographs (and in some cases, videos) via Twitter.
Related:
Do Interesting Things With Twitter
Source:
http://www.labnol.org/software/twitter-apps-for-windows-desktop/11668/
The Best Twitter Clients for Windows from AOL.
by
Sebastian Anthony on
March 3, 2011 at
03:00 PM
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With more than 190 million users, and less than half of those using Twitter.com to post updates, the installed Twitter client market is
massive. There are literally hundreds of Twitter clients spanning every desktop and mobile platform, and even a few cross-platform Web apps thrown into the mix.
Even if you narrow down the search to just one platform -- Windows -- there's still a dizzying amount of choices to pick from. There isn't even an official Twitter for Windows that scared newbies can pick up.
Well, good news: We've whittled down the choices so that you only have to choose from the best of the rest. From the typographically beautiful and slimline MetroTwit, to the heavy-hitting tour de force of Seesmic, and a handful in between, we have a Twitter client for you.
TweetDeck
One of the
oldest and most popular clients (at
the end of 2009, anyway) is
TweetDeck. It's not merely a Twitter client, either: it can bond with Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, Foursquare, and even Google's groundbreaking Buzz.
TweetDeck, being an
Adobe AIR app, is completely cross-platform; it looks identical, whether you're using it on Windows, Mac or Linux. It also uses an (optional) registration system, where you can sync your social network accounts with a TweetDeck account. You can then use your TweetDeck account to sign in on other computers, or with the
TweetDeck Web app, which is really a thing of beauty.
The only real downfall of TweetDeck for the desktop is that there's
only an AIR version available, which makes it quite a lot slower than its native brethren that utilize .NET. Its memory footprint can get a little chunky, too.
MetroTwit
The newest Twitter client in this line-up is
MetroTwit, which gets its name from Windows Phone 7's typographical
Metro UI. MetroTwit is almost the exact opposite of TweetDeck: it's a lot lighter in terms of features; it's snappier thanks to its native Windows nature; and it
only interfaces with Twitter.
With that said, MetroTwit still has some very cool features, such as infinite scrolling through tweets,nice themes, and autocompletion of @names and hashtags. Its notification system, though a bit noisy by default, is neat too.
The main thing to remember is that MetroTwit is very young and very fresh. Tons of new features will undoubtedly be added over the next few months -- just a couple of weeks ago, for example,
Proxlet and TwitLonger support were added.
Seesmic
Seesmic, like TweetDeck, supports just about every social network imaginable -- but instead of Adobe AIR, Seesmic uses Silverlight -- and apparently it works equally well on Windows and Mac!
We'd be lying if we said Seesmic was 'snappy' -- it's about on par with TweetDeck -- and it doesn't really have any features that set it apart from TweetDeck, either. We'll never know how a simple program like Seesmic can still feel sluggish with a 4GHz CPU and state-of-the-art graphics card under the hood.
There are mobile clients for every smartphone platform, which is cool -- but TweetDeck, with its registration system, and Android, iOS and Web apps, has that covered too.
Seesmic does have one advantage over TweetDeck, however: it's
developing a native Windows application! Development seems slow, however -- it's only at version 0.6
after first appearing 18 months ago -- and at the time of publishing, the program wouldn't even let us log into our Twitter account. Still, if you want to give it a go,
download the installer.
blu
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We're throwing
Blu into the mix primarily because of its striking looks -- it really is quite beautiful. We originally reviewed it more than two years ago, back when it was called Chirp, and when
Lee actually thought 100MB was a lot of RAM -- and, believe it or not, its memory footprint is now even larger!
Everything about Blu is smooth. Scrolling is a dream, and everything stretches and recoils like warm, blubbery rubber. There are dropshadows everywhere, and more transparent widgets than you thought possible. Buttons
glow when you mouse-over them!
Functionality-wise, it has nothing that TweetDeck or MetroTwit doesn't already provide -- but that isn't to say that Blu lacks features in any way: it's still a very capable Twitter client in its own right.
With that said, if you like your programs pretty, Blu is definitely for you -- but if you're a serious Twitter user, you might want to use a client with a UI that isn't quite so distracting.
tweetc
Finally, a Twitter client that isn't AIR- or Silverlight-based!
Tweetc is, believe it or not, a command line Windows Twitter client.
Or, at least, it would be a command line client if it worked. We can't get it to work under 32- or 64-bit Windows 7, and it hasn't been updated since October 2009. It might work under Windows XP, though!
The same developer, incidentally, has a Windows 7 gadget Twitter client called
Tweetz. It might be worth checking out if you have a secondary display to put widgets on.
Sobees
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Last year, Erez
asked Download Squad readers if they knew of any light-weight desktop Facebook clients, and one commenter mentioned
Sobees Lite. Fast forward a year, and it looks like the 'Lite' moniker has been stripped from the name and become
Sobees Desktop -- and it now supports Twitter, too.
Like Seesmic and TweetDeck, Sobees is a jack of all trades -- but unlike its competition, it's a native Windows program, which means it's
fast. The interface is exciting, too, with lots of weird multi-column and multi-row layouts to choose from. There's a few dropshadows, animations and transparencies thrown in for good measure, too.
There aren't many configuration options, however -- and because Sobees hasn't been designed specifically for Twitter, it's missing the ability to choose your own URL shortener, or add on functionality from services like TwitLonger. Still, it's well worth checking out if you want a native Windows client for its speed and smaller memory footprint.
Incidentally, there's a Silverlight
Sobees Web app, which is identical to the installed version, and should work on Mac OS X.
* * *
Have we missed your favorite Windows Twitter client? If so, be sure to leave a comment (and explain why it's better than the rest!)