![]() I used this feature on another twitter account that also was 7 years old. I have a support ticket in regarding that issue so it may or may not be resolved. It worked one night well & I was unable to unfollow thousands of people who hadn't tweeted in several years. This feature allows you to identify & unfollow people who haven't tweeted in 1+, 3+ or 6+ months. I currently have an issue for the "Inactive Following" with my largest Twitter account in Crowdfire. If you have a very large account it takes some time for your account to be synced. I'll also give a thumbs up to Crowdfire & have been using them for several years. ![]() You can unlock suspension fairly easily, but after that happens they are on to you and will be watching closely for further TOS abuse.The next time they may not lift suspension so easily. It gives no warning, but once you cross the line twitter will suspend your account, usually with no warning. Also it's easy to surpass Twitter's follow threshold limits with Crowdfire. It's not easy to maintain that over the long haul. The big problem with Crowdfire is that you have to sit there in real time to use it. Once established, most accounts grow at about 100 new followers per day. We get around this with an inhouse developed application to automate follow/unfollow extremely targeted accounts while staying within Twitter's following threshold limits. They watch for accounts exhibiting the above behavior and suspend them whenever they catch them. With Twitter its slow and steady that wins the race. Like follow 100 accounts in 30 seconds.Ĭrowdfire is pretty good, but if you use it like this Twitter will shut you down fast. It is not automated but if you get the app for your phone you can click really fast. It works well and it's instantly familiar to any Twitter user, but additional features like menu bar integration would make it easier to recommend instead of various third-party alternatives.Crowdfire is good and fully complies with TOS. The new Mac Twitter app isn't disappointing by any means, but neither does it impress. The Twitter Catalyst experiment seems successful, but I'd like to see more ![]() For instance, I would like to be able to compose and post a tweet directly from the menu bar, a feature that some third-party apps are now offering. Unfortunately, there are no Mac-specific features that could come in useful. I didn't encounter any issues, as everything was easy to find and the UI feels smooth. There is little point in talking about the app's features, as you're getting the same ones you're already familiar with, in a slightly different package. Works as well as expected, but some additional features would be nice Twitter for Mac is great for users who want a native app as an alternative to accessing the service from their browsers or grabbing an iPad. Assuming you've gotten used to the new interface, this desktop app will take virtually no getting used to, as the UI is pretty much identical. If you're a prolific tweeter, you've probably visited the website or accessed the mobile app countless times since they were redesigned. You shouldn't expect anything groundbreaking from this app, as it essentially just brings the Twitter iPad experience to your Mac, with a few tweaks, but it's worth checking out just how well it is integrated with the OS. First, it employs Twitter's redesigned UI, and second, it was created using the Catalyst framework, which allows developers to port iPad apps to macOS much more easily. No, this isn't the first Mac app Twitter has ever launched, but it deserves special consideration for a couple of reasons. ![]()
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