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April 8, 2009 12:23 AM PDT

Battle of the multicolumn Twitter clients

by Rafe Needleman

There was a time, not long ago, when the power Twitter users were gaga for Twhirl. This Air app gave (and still gives) you quick access to different views of your Twitter network, as well as your FriendFeed stream. But Twhirl didn't last as the go-to client once the Twitterati discovered TweetDeck.

This service has the big advantage of giving users a multicolumn dashboard of everything going on in Twitter that they might care about, all at once on one screen. It also let users set up ad-hoc groups of people to follow, and search terms to track. It's the Bloomberg terminal equivalent for Twitterheads.

TweetDeck is not the only multicolumn Twitter client, however. On Tuesday, Seesmic, which publishes Twhirl, released a preview of its own new multicolumn client, Seesmic Desktop. It's going up against another new client, the Mac-only Nambu, as well as the relatively unknown AlertThingy, which supports more non-Twitter services than any other Twitter client.

Heavy Twitter users would do well to consider these other apps. They might also want to reconsider Twhirl, which, while not strictly multicolumn, is multiwindow, and allows users to set up a dashboard page of their microblog activity on multiple accounts and networks at once.

TweetDeck, a popular multicolumn Twitter client.

(Credit: Screenshot by Rafe Needleman/CNET)

As you can see in the chart after the jump, social network butterflies will likely be best served by AlertThingy, which supports a ridiculous number of services. However, it has a clunky search feature and an inelegant system to shorten links. FriendFeed fans should keep Twhirl on their radar. In this group of products, it has the best support for that network. (Personally, I use Twhirl to keep on top of FriendFeed, althought I don't use it anymore for Twitter access.)

For power Twitter users, the new Seesmic Desktop has promise. It has a better interface for managing saved searches and groups than TweetDeck, and it's the only app in this roundup that lets you use your Webcam to snap pics for upload to Twitter (via Twitpic) directly. The preview release available now has bugs, though, and it also lacks a filter feature, which is an important tool to use alongside search to control the content you see in Twitter columns. I'd wait a while before adopting this app.

Seesmic Desktop: It's no TweetDeck, but give it time.

(Credit: Screenshot by Rafe Needleman/CNET)

Nambu is a strong product for Mac users. It does all the important things that TweetDeck does, except access services other than Twitter, and it adds support for displaying content from multiple Twitter accounts at once. It is easy to tweak what you see on-screen, and has the most Mac-like interface of these products.

We can't consign TweetDeck to the dustbin of Twitter apps yet. It is still the the multicolumn Twitter client I recommend for Windows users. It's stable, attractive, easy to use, and flexible. A publicly-availble beta version also supports Facebook; the only other app in this collection to offer that is AlertThingy. I'm keeping TweetDeck on my desktop as my primary Twitter client for the time being. I have an an eye on Seesmic Desktop, though. It shows great promise.

Update: There's a new version of TweetDeck.

Download links:
AlertThingy | Twhirl | TweetDeck | Nambu | Seesmic Desktop

Multicolumn Twitter clients compared

Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (23 Comments)
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by loiclemeur1 April 8, 2009 12:33 AM PDT
Hi Rafe, thanks for this review. If I may, ping.fm has been integrated in Twhirl for months and is planned very short term in Seesmic Desktop.
Reply to this comment
by rafe April 8, 2009 12:47 AM PDT
Updated the chart.
by Stunto April 8, 2009 12:55 AM PDT
Very helpful review, thanks. I noticed that TweetDeck is represented on the chart as not having a Single-Column Option. This may have been the case in the past, but the option is available in v0.21.5b

@stunto
Reply to this comment
by rafe April 8, 2009 1:01 AM PDT
Thanks. By single-column I mean, "displays multiple feeds, like @replies, directs, or content from multiple accounts, in one column." You can narrow the Tweetdeck window to show just one column, but it doesn't do *that*.
by frankiewarren April 8, 2009 1:12 AM PDT
Hey rafe, I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about how you got users into the groups using seesmic desktop. i might be missing something but it was very difficult for me to add say all my real friends into one group compared with tweetdeck. this makes the feature near useless to me and definitely somewhere below excellent... thanks!
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by ghaff April 8, 2009 4:17 AM PDT
It's awkward and slow. You basically have to either find them in your twitter-stream or pull them up via a search and then click on the little sun-looking icon when you mouse over their profile pic and add to userlist. At least that's what I was able to find. It's also--as I just found out--too easy to accidentally delete once created. Unfortunately neither TweetDeck nor SD really nail groups yet. (TweetDeck doesn't let you save them and lacks some other management features that would be useful.)
by CrystalsQuest April 8, 2009 3:05 AM PDT
I tried installing AlertThingy a bit over a month ago. It wouldn't even install... When I finally got it to say it was installed, it crashed every time I tried to run it. I gave up.

To be perfectly honest, although I have both tweetdeck and twhirl, I'm not real keen on either. The dark interface for tweetdeck is a pain to read and twhirl relies on being on a single computer. I do most of my twittering from igoogle where I can instantly cross link from my rss feeds in other gadgets, regardless of what PC I'm working on (I don't always have install privileges).

Now that the @replies is inclusive of all mentions and retweets, though, I might have to revisit some of these just for the filter capabilities!
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by nosugrefneb April 8, 2009 5:10 AM PDT
I'm surprised more people don't know about DestroyTwitter. It doesn't do a lot of this stuff, but at the same time, I don't _want_ a Twitter client that does all that stuff. It's similar to TweetDeck but better in my opinion.
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by thirashima April 8, 2009 10:20 AM PDT
Agreed. I think DestroyTwitter is pretty close to perfect. All I'd want from it is a little bit more control over size, but other than that, I'm very happy with it.
by JGrubbs April 8, 2009 5:16 AM PDT
You for got to mention PeopleBrowsr in your story. I found it when looking for an alternative to TweetDeck, since TweekDeck was becoming a resource HOG on mine, and my other friends systems. You should check @PeopleBrowsr out! http://www.peoplebrowsr.com/
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by cblackstone April 8, 2009 5:33 AM PDT
For my money, which I've already paid, EventBox is the best Mac twitter client.

http://thecosmicmachine.com/

Supports Google Reader, Facebook, Reddit, and Flickr along with reading RSS feeds. It's built like a Mac app and runs circles around TweetDeck.
Reply to this comment
by zeedotme April 8, 2009 6:27 AM PDT
Does EventBox offer groups?
by RenegadeScribe April 8, 2009 7:49 AM PDT
EventBox is a nice piece of software, but it is very slow when compared to TweetDeck, and Nambu. I also like the fact that nambu can manage multiple twitter accounts, If TweetDeck would do that, it would be perfect.
by plusque April 8, 2009 6:37 AM PDT
there is also @feedalizr to twitter, facebook, friendfeed & flickr
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by TmDowling April 8, 2009 8:02 AM PDT
I work from too many computers that I don't control to want to become dependent on an installed application (I'm happy with the recent changes to the twitter site, and hope they'll continue to roll out new features, as other developers work out the bugs in them) -- any suggestions for browser-based tools?.
Reply to this comment
by Lhaeo80 April 8, 2009 9:53 AM PDT
I don't understand what's so great about multicolumn clients - especially if you really use a lot of columns that don't fit on the screen. I wonder why there are so very few clients that use the good old tabs.

The only one supporting tabs (that I only know) is Bitter (http://bitterware.com/). It's not perfect (did a little review at http://shorttext.com/ex1a9w6 - already slightly outdated), but imo it got a lot potential.
Seesmic is the only one of the mentioned (windows) clients that are somewhat interesting, but I think I missed what's "excellent" about the group feature - but maybe the list of my friends/followers does exist and is just hidden "somewhere". Am I suppose to add friends to groups if they happen to tweet something? Still, it's beta and so too much criticism isn't fair, as too much hype isn't as well. Guess I'll keep monitoring it as well as DestroyTwitter and Statuzer, but stick to Bitter until one does it and implements my most wanted features (especially groups and filtering) not just in a mildly interesting way.

Granted, Air applications look nice, but I don't really need an art museum in my monitor :-)
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by Harrison912 April 8, 2009 11:42 AM PDT
I'm typically using Twitter to socially market my safety and security products so I'm always interested in information that wil help me with that. Thanks, Rafe, for this great article!
Reply to this comment
by geekgun April 8, 2009 11:48 PM PDT
I love these Twitter clients more than twitter. They bring value more than just connecting people. One of my favorite twitter apps is http://www.boilingpage.com that shows the hottest pages on the web based on how popular they are in Twitter. In fact, I found this article through http://www.boilingpage.com, and it shows up in the top 10 hottest pages in their home page.
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by lilykudrow April 9, 2009 12:07 AM PDT
These twitter clients are great.
Eventbox is great.
Twitter 2.0 Add-on for fring Available for WinMo and Symbian
http://techunits.com/content/1815/twitter_2.0_add-on_for_fring_available_for_winmo_and_symbian
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by cloudment April 9, 2009 5:52 AM PDT
check out the simplest possible Twitter client. If you use Internet Explorer you may want to try TweetIE, the twitter add-on for IE that helps you post quotes from the websites you visit to your twitter account http://tweetie.cloudberrylab.com/ FireFox plug-in is also available.
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by abhishekdesai April 9, 2009 10:43 PM PDT
join the rivalry here http://www.rivals4ever.com/Technology-rivalry-of-Tweetdeck-vs-Seesmic-Desktop-743-4.htm
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by divyangshah April 12, 2009 10:23 PM PDT
I love new seesmic desktop client, it is much better than tweetdeck and hey above rivalry is also cool. i loved the site.
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by divyangshah April 13, 2009 10:44 PM PDT
I love new seesmic desktop client, it is much better than tweetdeck and hey above rivalry is also cool. i loved the site.
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