Twitter unveils upgraded TweetDeck – but access requires verified ticks

Recently, several major changes have been introduced in Twitter to give users a better experience and access to more features. The social media platform has now launched a new and improved version of TweetDeck, a specialized dashboard application that helps users manage their Twitter feed in one list and monitor their content. As part of the upgraded version, several new features have been added to the product. Twitter has also required users to be ‘verified’ in order to access TweetDeck. Announcing the same, Twitter shared a long post with several features that will come with the updated version.

“We just launched a new, improved version of TweetDeck. All users can continue to access their saved searches and workflows via https://tweetdeck.twitter.com by selecting ‘Try the new TweetDeck’ in the bottom left menu,” Twitter noted in the post.

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The company also revealed that the change will happen within 30 days, before which users will have to verify their handles. “In 30 days, users will have to be verified to access TweetDeck,” the announcement said.

Notably, TweetDeck which was previously free to use and widely used by businesses and news organizations to monitor their content will now come with a price tag and could increase Twitter’s revenue generation.

Features of the advanced version of TweetDeck

As stated in the announcement, the new and improved version of TweetDeck will have a few features. Users will be able to carry over their saved searches, lists and columns to the new TweetDeck. Also, users will be prompted to import their columns the first time they load the application.

TweetDeck will also support full composer functionality, spaces, video docking, polls and more. Although the Teams functionality in TweetDeck is temporarily unavailable, it will be restored in the coming weeks.

These changes come at a time when TweetDeck users are facing a number of issues related to notifications and failure to load entire columns. It started shortly after Elon Musk limited the number of tweets users could read in a day to 6,000 for verified users and 600 daily posts for unverified users.