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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source: https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/2022\/6\/22\/23178133\/twitter-long-form-notes-articles-blogging-feature-ready-to-launch-features<\/a> Twitter is testing a new long-form blogging feature named Twitter Notes<\/a>, the company confirmed in a tweet<\/a>. The platform says the feature is currently available to a select group of users in the US, UK, Canada, and Ghana, and that people \u201cin most countries\u201d can read Notes on and off Twitter.<\/p>\n Twitter shared how the feature will work in two separate<\/a> GIFs<\/a>. Users can click into the \u201cWrite\u201d tab to start writing a Note, and can then embed the Note into their tweet when finished. Several<\/a> writers<\/a> have already<\/a> published Notes on the platform, which appear as long-form posts that can have tweets, videos, and images mixed in.<\/p>\n Leaks and reports of such a feature have been circulating for months, including Tuesday\u2019s report from TechCrunch<\/em><\/a> <\/em>that initially suggested (but now confirms) that Twitter is working on the feature. In May, app researcher Jane Manchun Wong shared screenshots of a feature<\/a> named Twitter Notes in some places and Twitter Articles in others. It let users write formatted blog posts complete with pictures, links, and embedded tweets. More screenshots of the same tool<\/a> were shared in April by another app researcher, Nima Owji, which showed options for users to share posts with their followers, or create standalone links for posts to share elsewhere on the web. <\/p>\n Adding long-form writing to Twitter could drastically change the character of the platform, which has long been defined by short-form writing (at first, tweets were just 140 characters in length, before doubling to 280 characters in 2017<\/a>). On the other hand, Twitter is arguably already full of longer written screeds, shared in the form of threads of tweets or tweeted screenshots of others\u2019 articles or users\u2019 own writing (usually captured in the iOS Notes app).<\/p>\n By incorporating long-form writing into its platform, Twitter could potentially capture more of the value of these posts. Publishing articles or notes directly to Twitter would make the text indexable for marketing and search purposes. It could also dovetail with the company\u2019s nascent Newsletters feature. In 2021, Twitter bought newsletter firm Revue<\/a> to take on rivals like Substack and has since integrated Revue newsletters into users\u2019 Twitter profiles<\/a>. However, the feature does not yet seem to have achieved wider popularity. <\/p>\n Update June 22th, 2022 1:32PM ET: <\/strong><\/em>Updated to acknowledge that Twitter has confirmed that the feature is in testing.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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