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Tweetdeck 280 google chrome
Tweetdeck 280 google chrome













tweetdeck 280 google chrome tweetdeck 280 google chrome

You will automatically be taken to the ChromeDeck app with the page’s title attribute and a link to that page populating the “compose” window. Simply visit the page you want to share, right-click anywhere on the page and click the “Share page with TweetDeck” option from the context menu. Share This Page – The latest version of ChromeDeck also adds an item to Chrome’s native context menu, allowing you to easily share any page you’re viewing in your browser through ChromeDeck.That makes it easy to reply to everyone mentioned in a tweet if you want to, but it’s also simple to reply only to the original author if that’s all you want to do. What’s more, it highlights the additional Twitter handles, so you can remove them from your reply with a single keystroke.

tweetdeck 280 google chrome

Reply to All – If you choose to reply to a tweet that includes more than one Twitter handle, ChromeDeck automatically adds all of the Twitter handles from the original tweet.In addition, just like the desktop app, when you click to view the full-size image, it loads in a modal window directly in the application rather than opening a new tab in your browser. Inline Images – Whenever an image link appears in your stream, ChromeDeck parses the link and displays a thumbnail of the image right there in the column.However, when a new entry appears if you are scrolled to somewhere other than the top of the column, the header turns yellow. Normally, the column headers are all a shade of gray. Notifications – In addition to the pop-up notifications similar to those used in the desktop app, ChromeDeck changes the color of the header for any column in which a new entry has appeared.Scroll to Top – When scrolling down through a column in ChromeDeck, you can always click the header for the column to easily scroll back to the top (saves a lot of work with the scroll wheel on your mouse).In addition, the application automatically loads the rest of the conversation in a stream directly below the reply box. Inline Replies – When you want to reply to someone in ChromeDeck, the reply box appears within the column with which you’re currently interacting.You can also add separate columns (the same way they work in Tweetdeck Desktop) and remove the merged columns if you like it better that way.The “Inbox” column shows all of your private messages from across all of the social networks you have added to your Tweetdeck account.The “Me” column shows your Twitter mentions (from all of your Twitter accounts), any replies people make to your Facebook posts and comments, etc.The “Home” column shows all of the information from all of the streams you have in your Tweetdeck account.The streams from the various services are color-coded to help you determine from where they fed. If you don’t like the merged column, you can remove it. The merged column can include multiple Twitter feeds, Facebook, FourSquare and Google Buzz streams all in a single column. Merged Columns – ChromeDeck includes unified columns, aggregating all of your feeds into a single column to save space and make things easier to view.Nice FeaturesĪs mentioned above, there are a lot of features that you’ll find in ChromeDeck that you won’t find in the desktop application (at least, not yet). There are a lot of neat features that you won’t find in the full-fledged desktop version but there are also a few features I used regularly in the AIR application that I sorely miss in the Chrome version. I am very pleased with the application, and am extremely impressed at how similar the appearance is to the desktop app. For the past few weeks, I have been using ChromeDeck (the native Tweetdeck application for the Google Chrome browser) fairly exclusively as my desktop Twitter client.















Tweetdeck 280 google chrome