With Twitter for Mac dead, here are the best alternatives for tweeting via macOS

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in macOS
If you've been using Twitter for Mac, it's time to shop around. Twitter's recent announcement it would no longer offer its app for download in the Mac App Store or support existing downloads beyond March has Twitter app-loving Mac users scrambling for a replacement.




Twitter announced in February that it would no longer support its official Mac client, and it will no longer be available to download as of mid-March. The discontinuation may be no love lost for some, however, as the official Twitter client had earned a meager 1.7 stars out of 5 from users on the Mac App Store.

Twitter explained its discussion (on Twitter, of course) by saying the company was going to focus its efforts "on a great Twitter experience that's consistent across platforms." While Mac users wait to see what they might mean for them, it leaves some wondering what options are available to take the native Mac client's place.




If you've been using Twitter, but not the Twitter client, you are probably familiar with what some have called better, more robust options, even before the Twitter app said goodbye to the App Store. If not, here are a few replacement options for you to consider.

Tweetdeck by Twitter

Cost: Free | Availability: Mac App Store or web app




With official support from Twitter, this may feel like the shortest jump for users of the now-defunct Twitter app. Tweetdeck, purchased by Twitter in 2011, allows users to divide Twitter and the Timeline into two distinct columns. The app, according to the App Store, offers more flexibility and customization for its users.

Tweetbot

Price: $9.99 | Availability: Mac App Store




If you like your Twitter with fewer sponsored tweets, no algorithms and no ads, Tweetbot might be the perfect fit for you. Customize the interface, switch up the content you see on your feed, and filter or mute until your heart's content. Tweetbot also supports Twitter's 280-character count, direct messaging, images, videos, GIFs and more.

Quick Tweet

Price: Free | Availability: Mac App Store




No, it's not a robust Twitter substitute, but if you want to fire off tweets quickly (and then check your timeline on your iPhone), this might do the trick. Quick Tweet works by allowing you to type a message quickly from your desktop without getting bogged down in what's happening on your Timeline.

Twitterrific 5 for Twitter

Price: $7.99 | Availability: Mac App Store




Billing itself as a "seamless Twitter experience," Twitterrific is a popular alternative choice. Like Tweetbot, there are no ads, promoted tweets or "while you were away" updates to sort through. Users can customize fonts and the appearance of media, while also getting support for Mac's Notification Center and using multiple windows for different accounts.

Twitter.com

Price: Free | Availability: Web-based

Maybe the disappearance of Twitter for Mac hasn't been that big of a deal for you because you've been using Twitter.com all along. If you are a Twitter for Mac user, navigating to Twitter.com from your web browser is old-school, but it still works. No, you don't get extra customizations and, yes, you do have to deal with sponsored tweets and algorithms, but it is a quick and easily-accessible fix. And, it appears Twitter may be trying to drive traffic to a website -- as Facebook has always done -- going forward.

Site-specific browser with Fluid Browser

Price: $2.99 | Availability: Mac App Store




Site-specific browser applications like Fluid can be useful for turning web apps into standalone docks, allowing you to give Twitter its own icon and window and, you, the feel and functionality of a standalone app.

Fluid allows you to bring up a website on your computer as if it were its own desktop application. If you've ever saved a webpage as a shortcut on your iPhone by clicking "Add to Home Screen," the concept behind Fluid is very similar.

Once you download and install it to your Mac, Fluid's step-by-step set-up process is easy to navigate. Simple choose a URL you want to create a desktop app for, name it, set a location where you want the application to live on your computer and you're finished. Then, when you're ready to access Twitter, you can click the macOS "app" you just created and get back to tweeting.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 12
    bwintxbwintx Posts: 1member
    Tweetdeck as a macOS app seems OK at first, but IMHO it crashes frequently and the UI is exactly the same as if it were a browser tab, so I'm not sure of its utility as opposed to just opening a tab in Safari. Wish Twitter would incorporate its functionality into the Twitter site. A Twitter site that auto-updated timelines, allowed multiple columns, etc., would be awesome.
  • Reply 2 of 12
    One option not mentioned would also be to stop tweeting.  Frankly, nobody cares.  Most useless expression of the internet ever invented, and judging by some of its most prominent participants, if I had to take bets on how WWIII might start, my money is on Twitter.  
  • Reply 3 of 12
    One option not mentioned would also be to stop tweeting.  Frankly, nobody cares.  Most useless expression of the internet ever invented, and judging by some of its most prominent participants, if I had to take bets on how WWIII might start, my money is on Twitter.  
    How will people cope without expressing themselves to the world about every little outrage?  Someone should create a Twitter placebo app.  The interface looks like Twitter, but the tweets go nowhere.  Heck, you could make it a general purpose app that sends all tweets, Facebook posts, Instagram photos, Pinterest whatevers, etc. to /dev/null.
    mike1anton zuykov
  • Reply 4 of 12
    mike1mike1 Posts: 3,284member
    One option not mentioned would also be to stop tweeting.  Frankly, nobody cares.  Most useless expression of the internet ever invented, and judging by some of its most prominent participants, if I had to take bets on how WWIII might start, my money is on Twitter.  
    How will people cope without expressing themselves to the world about every little outrage?  Someone should create a Twitter placebo app.  The interface looks like Twitter, but the tweets go nowhere.  Heck, you could make it a general purpose app that sends all tweets, Facebook posts, Instagram photos, Pinterest whatevers, etc. to /dev/null.
    Just add a 15-minute delay on the posting of every tweet and include a button called "Remove foot from mouth" to stop the tweet from going out.

  • Reply 5 of 12
    MplsPMplsP Posts: 3,925member
    mike1 said:
    One option not mentioned would also be to stop tweeting.  Frankly, nobody cares.  Most useless expression of the internet ever invented, and judging by some of its most prominent participants, if I had to take bets on how WWIII might start, my money is on Twitter.  
    How will people cope without expressing themselves to the world about every little outrage?  Someone should create a Twitter placebo app.  The interface looks like Twitter, but the tweets go nowhere.  Heck, you could make it a general purpose app that sends all tweets, Facebook posts, Instagram photos, Pinterest whatevers, etc. to /dev/null.
    Just add a 15-minute delay on the posting of every tweet and include a button called "Remove foot from mouth" to stop the tweet from going out.

    Ditto that for e-mail. I have a coworker who needs a delay function on his 'send' button...
  • Reply 6 of 12
    dtoubdtoub Posts: 18member
    Since twitter removed their macOS app (which hadn’t been updated in a year anyway despite a lot of protestations from many of us), I’ve been using Tweeten, which is essentially Tweetdeck but actually gets updated. I’ve tried the paid options and ultimately found issues with both Tweetbot and Tweetdeck that just didn’t work for me personally. My concern with Tweetdeck is that there is no reason on the face of it for Twitter to pull it as well. And Twitter could also pull the plug on third-party solutions generally by further restricting or removing the APIs. That’s why no third-party app, for example, has Moments and a few other twitter-only features.

    Biggest downside of Twitter not updating their own app and allowing it to still exist: share sheets are limited to the built-in OSX support, which does not allow for longer tweets. 
  • Reply 6 of 12
    mpbarrympbarry Posts: 2member
    I am reasonably contented with Tweeten, which is based on Tweetdeck on the web, and utilizes the macOS Notification Center (notifications include the avatars of the sender's Twitter account so I know whose Tweet it is). Tweeten receives frequent updates. I use it in a one-column mode for just my timeline, but retweeting is a hassle as it requires manually expanding the app to two columns in order to click the retweet button. Tweeten also weighs in at over 300mb.
  • Reply 8 of 12
    mpbarrympbarry Posts: 2member
    I think Fluid Browser is possibly being confused with the Fluid app that is a single-site browser.
    edited March 2018
  • Reply 9 of 12
    ktappektappe Posts: 824member
    I had been happy with YoruFukurou, but it seems to be abandonware with no updates in over a year. So now I'm trying out Tweeten which works pretty well once you get used to the interface. The biggest downside so far is that it uses a lot of RAM, but otherwise seems stable & supported. 
  • Reply 10 of 12
    anton zuykovanton zuykov Posts: 1,056member
    mike1 said:
    One option not mentioned would also be to stop tweeting.  Frankly, nobody cares.  Most useless expression of the internet ever invented, and judging by some of its most prominent participants, if I had to take bets on how WWIII might start, my money is on Twitter.  
    How will people cope without expressing themselves to the world about every little outrage?  Someone should create a Twitter placebo app.  The interface looks like Twitter, but the tweets go nowhere.  Heck, you could make it a general purpose app that sends all tweets, Facebook posts, Instagram photos, Pinterest whatevers, etc. to /dev/null.
    Just add a 15-minute delay on the posting of every tweet and include a button called "Remove foot from mouth" to stop the tweet from going out.

    premium version feature, no doubt...or, perhaps, even a subscription based one!
  • Reply 11 of 12
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    The midterm elections are coming up -- the Russians must be scrambling to find a replacement...
  • Reply 12 of 12
    NicBNicB Posts: 3member
    mpbarry said:
    I think Fluid Browser is possibly being confused with the Fluid app that is a single-site browser.
    Yes, it is, and now I've spent money on a pointless app. Furthermore, Fluid App doesn't work very well. Fluid Browser is just another browser! @AppleInsider can I have my money back?  :|
    edited March 2018
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