Twitter is trying to fix the problem that many users find it overwhelming to even begin to sort through the sea of tweets in their timelines.
On Wednesday, Twitter announced it is rolling out a "best tweets" feature that will show users about a dozen curated tweets at the top of their timeline that users are likely to care about most. The tweets will appear in reverse chronological order, and the rest of users' timelines will display as usual underneath. Users can hit refresh to return to viewing tweets in the timeline's standard live format.
The tool uses the same technology as
"You follow hundreds of people on Twitter — maybe thousands — and when you open Twitter, you may feel like you’ve missed their most important Tweets," Mike Jahr, senior engineering manager at Twitter, said in a post. "We hear this from people every day. Starting today, you can choose a new timeline feature that helps you catch up on the most important Tweets from the people you follow."
Twitter said that those using the feature in tests tend to tweet and retweet more often. If that trend continues, it could bring a welcome boost to the site's user activity and may even help the site address its struggle to attract new users.
"There is great content on Twitter, and it’s not always easy to find," Twitter product manager Michelle Haq said. "We’re really responding to that problem."
For now, users must go into their settings to activate the new tool, which is available on iOS, Android and on the Web. However, over the coming weeks, Twitter will automatically turn on the feature and will notify users when it does. Users will have the option to turn off the feature if they don't like it.
The number of tweets that will appear in the new, curated section can vary depending on the volume of tweets in a users' existing home timeline, how much content the user has accumulated since their last visit to the site and on the popularity of the tweets they've missed. However, in tests, about a dozen tweets were typically included in the new section. Twitter said it plans to continue tweaking the feature over time.
The launch followed a report by Buzzfeed last week that Twitter planned to reorganize the timeline into an algorithmic feed, a la
Hello Twitter! Regarding #RIPTwitter: I want you all to know we're always listening. We never planned to reorder timelines next week.
— Jack (@jack) February 6, 2016
The change also comes just before the company is set to announce its fourth quarter and full-year earnings results later today. As competitors such as Google and Facebook continue to invest more in real-time services, Twitter will have to think carefully about how it wants to differentiate itself as a live platform. Facebook recently launched a live video streaming feature, similar to Twitter's Periscope app. Facebook executives have also emphasized the social media giant's intention to continue edging into live sharing.