Twitter No Longer Counts Photos, GIFs, Videos Toward 140-Character Limit (adweek.com)
Twitter is finally relaxing its 140-character limit. The company announced today that it will now don't count things like emojis, images against the 140-character limit. Adding quotes, polls, videos will also no longer reduce your characters. From a report on Adweek: The moves don't come as a huge surprise. In May, the company revealed that such changes were likely forthcoming. At any rate, with video and GIFs becoming increasingly important to the social channel, the developments make sense. Social media marketers, no doubt, will enjoy the extra freedom as they try to get their points across to potential customers. "With long-form content on the rise, businesses who can take advantage of Twitter's new offering stand poised to create deep, meaningful communities," said Rod Favaron, Spredfast CEO.
"it will now don't count"
I know some people love it, but I am hard pressed to think of anything worth saying in 140 characters or less. I always saw Twitter as like an emergency broadcast system for the Internet, not a form of conversation. Adding an image won't change my view, I have wind in my sails. Just read some of my posts.
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
Twitter's transformation into 4chan . . . with a 140 character limit and many more ads.
Double space
THE FUCK CARES?
That's precisely why Twitter became so popular --- it's a platform where reasoning simply does not fit in the available space.
This isn't only because people have nothing worth saying themselves, but also because they don't want to hear those who do.
So I suppose I can put in a book-length tweet as a ransom note GIF, or maybe just scanned text? Cool!
and wanting to type twitter.com and post something like right now, after I post this as Slashdot is more important.
by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
Twitter is not a forum for proper debate. It's not really the short message size which is at fault, but that most of the readers don't have the attention span to read anything longer. So they just tweet their pre-existing views and only follow people who share the same beliefs.
Twitter was a bold as an experiment for democratic debate, but it's only shown that the vast majority of voters are too pig-headed, too arrogant and too poorly-read to logically debate anything beyond what happened in last nights episode of Walking Dead or FOX's talking points (or worse, Mat Lauer's. Deeeeerp). The problem isn't the platform. It's people, and that applies to any social media platform... including Slashdot. There isn't much serious debate here either. Most people post their thoughts and never even check back. There are no long threads here moving towards 'truth'. And a greater majority post unfunny one-liners (often just a variant of the previous one-liners post) and think they're Louis CK.
But for posting selfies, spamming, professional self-promotion and reinforcing your own world view, yeah, it's great, and it's true of Facebook, Instagram, everything else.
Since when have GIFs and JPGs EVER fit in 140 characters? They'd have to be 3 pixels by 2 pixels. So this makes no sense.
Imagine a GIF here.
Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
I still won't use it. It is akin to Facebook, if Facebook had decided to emphasize "Super-poke" as the primary feature. A twitter feed looks like a stream of Dixie-cup jokes and sales flyers crammed under a windshield wiper at the mall.
tone
nobody cares. the internet has already moved on. the proof is in the number of comments to this submission.
And so they are breaking the api and abbreviate these tweets with "..." and a link to /i/web/TWEET_ID, locking out all existing apps from properly reading them, even their own apps in slightly older versions.