The best just got better!
Tweetie 2 (iTunes) was released to the App Store last night, shortly after developer Loren Brichter announced to the masses on Twitter that it had been approved. The buzz about it on Twitter felt very similar to that which accompanies the release of a brand new Apple product. It was THAT good.
After I wrote a little about Tweetie 2 a couple of weeks ago, I read some pre-release reviews which confirmed that there were no themes in Tweetie 2, just the one simple theme. I wasn’t entirely sure how I was going to feel about that as Chat Bubbles has been my theme of choice since day one. I didn’t like the thought of having that taken away from me. But, the list of features kept my interest fully there, so I wasn’t going to pass judgement until I had the app infront of me.
Let’s just say I’m now thinking “Chat Bubbles? What Chat Bubbles?”. The simple clean white theme is gorgeous. Simplicity and absolute elegance. The screengrabs of the theme don’t do it justice. See it on your iPhone and you’ll feel the love. I have barely put my iPhone down since I bought Tweetie 2 last night. There’s features I haven’t touched yet – still so much more to play with which is what I love in an iPhone app. Having everything there and fully functional, but still managing to find something even more cool on closer inspection.
My favourite bits of Tweetie 2 so far are the “pull down to refresh” feature which gives that satisfying little pop sound when it’s done, threaded conversations and the little blue neon markers underneath unread tweets, @’s and DM’s. The ‘nearby’ feature is also particularly beautiful. I’m also a huge fan of the new simple silver icon. I think, like the application behind it, it’s simple and elegent. It sits on the opposite side of the same row as my Camera app on my iPhone’s home screen – and looks right at home there.
Rather than do a full review of every feature, I am going to hand you over to the Cult Of Mac who have done a sterling job on that front. One more thing I will say, however, this is worth £1.79 ten times over. I seriously do mean that. I believe fully in supporting developers when they create beautiful applications like this which change the way I use my iPhone and Twitter on a daily basis. £1.79 just doesn’t even begin to cover my appreciation.
Rating: 




Tweetie 2 – iTunes [£1.79/$2.99]
| Print article | This entry was posted by Sam on October 10, 2009 at 7:24 pm, and is filed under Apple, Applications, Communication, iPhone. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |





about 11 months ago
Even though I am a fan of Twitterrific (as you and your readers know well from previous comments), I gave Tweetie 2 a test run and do think it is a nice upgrade of Tweetie.
I admit it has a killer user interface that is absolutely gorgeous. However, two things that twitterrific has are things I couldn’t give up. A completely unified timeline, and the “marks” feature that arrived with version 2. I use marks to—well, mark—interesting tweets or tweets with links when I can only glance at them. Nice to have a way to follow-up on things without publicly faving them.
All that said, Tweetie 2 will remain on my iPhone as a backup client should there be a Twitpocalypse 3.
about 11 months ago
Hai five, Chris!
I put Twitterrific on my iPhone a couple of weeks ago as, admittedly, I had hardly looked at it following it’s big 2.1 update. Whilst the raven theme is beautiful, I still found myself unsure as to where everything was. For instance, it took me 2 days to discover how to view a persons profile. I had to go into Settings > Advanced and then tell it that I want it to ‘Show Author’ when I tap the avatar.
But, in my opinion, Tweetie and Twitterrific are the two that have raised the bar for iPhone twitter clients. Everything else, once again in my opinion, seems to pack all kinds of features in but looks as ugly as sin….or vice versa. Tweetie and Twitterrific look absolutely loved all over.
Can’t wait for the updated Mac version with syncing between that and the iPhone version.
about 11 months ago
lol Sam, I certainly would not pay £10.79 for a Twitter application and sure many others wouldn’t
However, I do agree that it’s features, design and implementation is fantastic and for the price it’s a steal (though many people are against the price based on upgrade).
The pull down to refresh feature is a great addition and one that I think many more apps will add in the coming months.
I am actually very disappointed that there is no dark theme and hope that at some point the author re-introduces it other than that so far I have not found anything wrong with it.
about 11 months ago
Hey Stephen. Heh, well I paid $19.95 for Tweetie Mac, so I’d have no problem paying that for the iPhone app, especially when I consider the amount of £5.99’s I’ve spent on games that I haven’t touched in months
The white bubbles theme in the DM section in Tweetie 2 looks like the Mac app and I think that would be great as a theme offering. I hope themes do get reinstated at some point because although I love the default look, I know many people who preferred the dark theme and it’s always nice to have that option.
about 11 months ago
Yeah, I have tons of games I rarely play now that I paid full whack for, but still would not pay that much for a Twitter app on the phone. Maybe thats due to the majority of apps being low priced so have been spoilt for so long lol