I've been a big fan of Tweetie both on the Mac and on the iPhone, where it is now the official iPhone Twitter Client, for quite some time now. I paid for a license on the Mac, and I bought the premium version on the App Store for my phone.
Even at £1.79, I felt it was great value, and I'm sure many users agree with me. Now it's free, there's really no reason not to use it, especially so given that - since April 9th of this year - it's also the official client for the platform.
Sadly, that's probably why my satisfaction with the desktop version is beginning to wane.
Goodbye atebits, hello Twitter Inc.
Loren Brichter, the man behind atebits and Tweetie, is now part of Twitter's mobile team. Who can blame him? To all of those who dislike Loren for 'selling out': you'd have done exactly the same thing in his situation. That's the dream situation for any indie developer - to be snapped up.
Right now, his priorities have doubtless changed. We're told an iPad app is in the works, and despite many voices to the contrary, Loren insists that Tweetie 2.0 is coming for the Mac, even going so far as to say that he'll continue working on the app up to version 3.0.
However, I'm guessing that Twitter's management have made it quite clear that, as an employee, his top priorities are now Twitter for iPhone and iPad. Despite reports that Twitter employees love Tweetie for Mac, I imagine that the priorities for Tweetie for Mac are lower than his other projects.
Plenty of people believe that Tweetie has turned into vapourware and that, now he's part of Twitter Inc., it's increasingly unlikely that he'll release a newer version anytime soon.
For the record, I count myself among the optimists.
From optimism to frustration
The Twitter API continues to go from strength to strength. The retweet feature alone is one of my favourites. Some of the people I follow have a lot of interesting things to say - after all, why else would I follow them. Sadly, some of them suffer from bouts of retweetarrhea. Originally, this would mean a screenful of RT this and RT that - something that wasn't easily filtered.
These days, the official method of retweeting - which attributes the original content to the original author - is as simple as hitting the retweet button in supported clients, and seeing original tweets from their original authors in your timeline.
The only problem is that, right now, Tweetie's support of retweeting is limited to showing you the tweets in the old RT @user: fashion. Not great.
Lists is another great feature of Twitter - I can segregate a bunch of people who are not quite interesting enough to follow and put them into a list. All I need to then do is look at the list and view the tweets from those users. It's like TweetDeck's panes feature, but officially supported and very much a welcome addition.
As far as Tweetie's concerned though, lists don't exist. Neither does the ability to geo-tag your tweets.
None of these features are easily accessible via the Tweetie desktop client, but for me, it's the absence of the correct implementation of Twitter's retweet API that I miss the most.
Still hopeful, but only just
Before Tweetie, I used Twitterrific from the IconFactory. I had a single Twitter account, and I kept up with a relatively small number of people - in the low tens. The application was simple to use, didn't get in the way, and did what I needed it to do. When I was on my Windows machine - back when I had a physical PC - I used to use TweetDeck, up until I noticed that whilst running it was taking up a sizeable chunk of my processing time.
I've been looking for a client to replace Tweetie for quite some time. The problem was exacerbated last week by various API changes and problems which resulted in both Tweetie and Twitterrific being unable to connect to the service or be of any real use:
To Tweetie's credit, even though there are many other clients out there, I haven't been able to get to grips with any of them. Despite it's flaws and lack of support for the newest features of the Twitter platform, I still consider it to be the best desktop client out there - but only just.
I understand Loren's choice to not give an indication of when Tweetie 2 is likely to arrive, but having some sort of dialogue with your users, letting them know what's being worked on, would be far better than leaving them in the dark.
Despite the fact that I find EchoFon just short of being a credible replacement, and Socialite being far too busy, if Tweetie 2 doesn't arrive soon, I can see myself learning to live with their differences and shortcomings and jumping ship to something new - especially if Twitter releases any more must-have features.