Twitter is removing the 140-character limit for Direct Messages

TECHi's Author Connor Livingston
Opposing Author Androidauthority Read Source Article
Last Updated
TECHi's Take
Connor Livingston
Connor Livingston
  • Words 63
  • Estimated Read 1 min

With the same 140-character limit that tweets have, Twitter’s Direct Messages feature has always felt more like an afterthought than an actual messaging service. That’s going to change here soon, however, as the company will be removing the 140-character limit for Direct Messages (but not tweets) in the near future, although what the limit will be raised to is currently unknown. 

Androidauthority

Androidauthority

  • Words 200
  • Estimated Read 1 min
Read Article

Twitter’s 140-character limit is likely what has taken the popular social network to the top. These short posts are great for expressing your thoughts promptly and sharing web content effectively. There’s no crazy 1000-word rants on Twitter, and that is what makes it such a good place to spend your precious time on. Would’t you agree that their messaging service is a bit broken, though? It’s hard to have a conversation via Direct Messages, knowing you will hit a limit and need to start a new DM. This is why most of us switch to other messaging services when we want to discuss anything, even if it may be something we saw on Twitter. This will no longer be an issue, as the popular social network aims to keep its users around more by removing that 140-character limit on DMs. I am not sure if this means DMs can now contain unlimited characters (which could probably also be bad). Twitter is not crystal clear about this part yet, but nothing is pointing toward a higher character limit either. What we do know is these changes will come into effect starting July, which is coming very soon.

Source

NOTE: TECHi Two-Takes are the stories we have chosen from the web along with a little bit of our opinion in a paragraph. Please check the original story in the Source Button below.

Balanced Perspective

TECHi weighs both sides before reaching a conclusion.

TECHi’s editorial take above outlines the reasoning that supports this position.

More Two Takes from Androidauthority

Google is killing off yet another thing that nobody knew existed
Google is killing off yet another thing that nobody knew existed

Google isn't afraid to experiment, and as a result, the company ends up having to kill off a lot of products and…

Xiaomi is about to launch its first product in the United States
Xiaomi is about to launch its first product in the United States

It'll be a while before Xiaomi launches a smartphone in the United States, assuming it ever does, but that doesn't mean…

Google Fiber wants to beam internet access to people’s homes
Google Fiber wants to beam internet access to people’s homes

In the six years since it was launched, Google Fiber has only expanded to three metropolitan areas, and even though it's working…

Instagram is planning to stop showing posts chronologically
Instagram is planning to stop showing posts chronologically

It's only natural for social networks to display posts in chronological order, which is what Instagram has always done, but this often…