Categories: Social Media

Finally, Twitter is now showing users’ images properly

In the past few days Twitter has quietly rolled out a small update to how it manages users’ images. But this small update could make a big difference to how we view Twitter as a media destination.

With the new update users are able to see their images and videos on a single page in a grid format.  And while this might sound insignificant, it’s an important change for Twitter, as the company moves to position itself as more of a media company than a social network.

Twitter image grid format

You can view a user’s images in this format by clicking on any of their images and selecting the grid icon to the top left. You can also go directly to the grid page by using this url (just change thesociable to the user’s Twitter handle) https://twitter.com/thesociable/media/grid

If you look at the latest updates released by each of the three major social networks in the past year, the majority of these have focused on images.  Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ have been spending a significant amount of time making it easier for us to upload images, edit images, and share images.

This week, Google+ released a feature that lets users set animated gifs as their profile photos, while in the past year it has released photo sphere and now shows higher quality versions of users’ images.

Facebook implemented drag-and-drop image uploading in December and earlier in 2012 it redeveloped its image gallery to show larger images to users. It also spent over $1 billion on Instagram.

But it’s Twitter that’s come the furthest. In 2011 it launched its own image handling service, pic.twitter.com, and in September 2012 it removed all third party image uploading sites from its app. Then in December Twitter, responding to Facebook’s purchase of Instagram, launched its own image filtering service. Twitter kicked off 2013 with the purchase of Vine, an animated image/video app that has yet to go mainstream.

They’re doing this because they know we like images.  They know that users are more likely to comment, share, and like others’ images and videos than they are to engage with their plain text status updates.

Interestingly, this is actually something of a return to form for the site. When Twitter first launched its image handling services it came with a grid view but this was then removed – much to the displeasure of avid Twitter users.

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Recent Posts

AI safety for kids a top concern for COPPA compliant AI startups

June means the start of summer is upon us, and as teachers put the 2024-2025…

1 day ago

DARPA to simulate disease outbreaks: model lockdown, vaccination & messaging strategies

Why is DARPA modeling disease outbreaks & intervention strategies while simultaneously looking to predict &…

3 days ago

ManagedMethods launches Advanced Phishing solution against rising tide of malicious emails 

Earlier this year, a report from non-profit organization the Center for Internet Security shone a…

3 days ago

DARPA ‘CoasterChase’ looks to mitigate stress with ingestible neurotech

DARPA is putting together a research program called CoasterChase that aims to mitigate warfighters' stress…

4 days ago

U.S. Fusion Power Plant Design Passes Independent Review

In the global race to develop and commercialize fusion power reactors, U.S. scientists have reached…

4 days ago

Pet Health Meets Convenience: New Partnership Aims to Empower Pet Owners with At-Home Testing

Innovative Pet Lab, a science-forward company offering at-home health tests for pets, today announced a…

1 week ago