Micro-blogging service Twitter says it is working on a new tool to help you "retweet." Retweeting is jargon for re-posting something posted (or tweeted) by another user. Retweeting typically gives credit to the original poster. In offering this feature Twitter is just playing catch-up to what 3rd party apps already do.
Reposting or retweeting a mesage you like on Twitter.com can only be done via cutting and pasting the tweet and then adding attribution (such as RT: @username) at the beginning or the end of the post. But now Twitter is working on a new method to repost tweets on its online interface that will show in your friend's timeline only the original message you retweeted.
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The new retweeting method is not yet ready for prime-time, as Twitter is still sketching out how to make this feature work more exactly, said the company's co-founder and Creative Director Biz Stone in a blog post last night. But the developers working on this project have put together some draft mock-ups (on the left, click to enlarge) to illustrate this feature.
According to the feature mock-ups from Twitter, when someone you follow retweets a tweet, it will appear in your home timeline. You can then hover over a tweet and a "Retweet" option will appear next to the now present "Reply" feature. After a confirmation message, the original tweet will appear in your friends' timeline together with a line underneath mentioning who else has reposted the message.
Twitter said that the new retweeting options should appear on its website "in a few weeks or so" but at first launch, the feature will be limited to a subset of users. The new retweeting options should appear around the same time in third-party Twitter clients such as TweetDeck (PC/Mac) or Tweetie (Mac), which already feature automatic reposting options.
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