New layoffs and a redesign of a number of features marked the start of Twitter’s ongoing transformation. The “bookmark” button, image length crop, and other adjustments were verified by the new CEO Elon Musk on Friday. The businessman provided a specific timeline for some of the upgrades, but his comments on the microblogging website suggest that there are still more adjustments in the pipeline.
He wrote in a post on Friday, “Bookmark button relocating to tweet details page, resolving image length crop, and other minor bug fixes next week.” Additionally, the new Twitter CEO announced that bookmarks would become “searchable.”
When a Twitter user asked for “an option that allows us to eliminate cropping while uploading an image,” he had previously responded in the positive, stating that he “didn’t like it either.”
Additionally, Musk stated that the setup of Twitter’s “recommended” section would change and become “far better.”Musk told a user that switching between the “recommended” and “followed” portions would be simple with the “new UI coming this week.”
The tech tycoon had hinted last week on Sunday that the planned updates will make it “simple to build folders to categorise tweets into various categories.”Additionally, he has previously mentioned “major backend server architectural modifications” and a “multi-part, considerably broader UI makeover” for the platform.
“No later than the next month, Twitter will make account or tweet status available and publish a tweet suggestion code. Transparency fosters confidence, “On Saturday morning, the company’s CEO made a posting.Musk’s answers to Twitter users suggest that a number of additional adjustments could be made in the near future in addition to the impending bookmarking and image crop updates.
After a Twitter user requested that spelling errors be corrected in search results and seemed to imply that future tweets would highlight terms in “bold” and “italics,” he answered in the affirmative.
Musk also appeared to agree with a recommendation from a user on the internet that Twitter user profiles display data other than the number of followers they currently have, such as “something like their 30-day rolling average of views or some other view-based indicator.”