So a $4.99 upgrade gives you access to all features on both your iPhone and iPad. Twitterrific is a universal app: Unlike Tweetbot 3.0, Twitterrific 5 comes with the iPad app. On my iPhone, I switch regularly between the two (when I’m using my iPhone that is). Tweetbot on my Mac, Twitterrific on my iPad. I’m currently in this weird situation where I’m using both. The same is true for Twitterrific if you use Twitter majorly on your iPhone and iPad. So if you primarily use Twitter on your iPhone and Mac, it makes sense to buy Tweetbot (UI-parity and timeline sync being the two biggest reasons). Tweetbot’s new Mac app ($12.99) is pretty awesome. It’s Twitterrific’s Mac app ($4.99) that’s still carrying the pre-Yosemite UI and hasn’t been updated since December 2013. Their website says that Tweetbot 4 will come with iPad version, but we don’t know when that will be. Tweetbot’s iPad app ($2.99) still carries the old, pre-iOS 7, skeuomorphic UI. If you’re an iPad user, currently Twitterrific 5 is the only good Twitter client around. Also check out the relatively new Flyte app.īut if you use Twitter enough that you’re actually looking for a third-party app, you’ll want to pay the $4.99. If you’re looking for a free third-party Twitter client that doesn’t suck (most of them do), Twitterrific is a good, although limited choice. Now you can pay $2.99 enable each of them separately or just pay $4.99 to remove all restrictions. The only thing is that you won’t get any push notifications, tweet translation feature and you’ll need to see ads. You can sign in, view all the tweets without any problem. Now it’s gone free with optional in-app purchases. When I bought Twitterrific, it was still a paid app. Just press and hold a link to send it to Pocket.
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