We’re still working on making improvements to the Teams feature and we’ll share more information about those updates as soon as possible. Video Docking allows you to watch a video while performing other functions like accessing content in the same column, and changing Decks.Create column types like profile, topics, explore, events, moments, and bookmarks. A Column Creator that offers a more intuitive way to create columns, and includes the ability to “Search Twitter” from within the column.Decks that let you organize your columns into groups for cleaner workspaces.Tweet order so you can view top Tweets or latest Tweets first in columns.Advanced search helps you find the content you're looking for.A Tweet composer that lets you create threads and add photos, videos, GIFs, polls, or emojis to your Tweets, including scheduled Tweets.You can also include existing columns from the standard TweetDeck version into your TweetDeck Preview experience. A sign-on flow that helps you set up your TweetDeck experience the way you’d like to.Just start as a regular user and everything should be fine. It’s being run under root, while your profile is on your regular user. After the update it automatically runs the new version of TweetDeck (or Seesmic Desktop). AIR distro, save it somewhere, and as root run the AIR Application Installer program: /usr/bin/Adobe AIR Application Installer Go to TweetDeck or Seesmic Desktop official website and download the latest. So we’ll probably have to go the other way round. It seems that we’re not allowed to use the auto-update feature (the popup-box that shows up when you run TweetDeck and asks you to automatically update the software). Updating TweetDeck and Seesmic Desktop (and all other Adobe AIR applications) is quite straightforward in Windows and Mac, but I came up with the same permissions issues in Linux. I got my Twitter developer account which gives me 20,000 API calls per hour (unlike the ordinary accounts with 100), and the new TweetDeck doesn’t work with that amount (I’ve no idea why), so I had to switch to Seesmic Desktop which is also based on Adobe AIR, thus cross-platform and I managed to install it on my Fedora 10 machine using the above method. I’ve stopped using TweetDeck for a while due to a couple of reasons. Updating TweetDeck or Seesmic Desktop on Fedora Don’t overload the API and don’t forget to switch off any other Twitter clients you use before launching TwitterDeck. Don’t forget to choose the right tweets update configuration (I got it working at about 80%). Used to TwitterFox but I guess TwitterDeck will do just great. You can create the shortcut icons, but you shouldn’t launch TweetDeck after installation, cause you wouldn’t wanna run it as root, right? After the setup’s finished check out your Applications – Accessories menu, you should see TweetDeck. That should launch the Adobe AIR app installer. Open your terminal, logon to root and try the following: /usr/bin/Adobe AIR Application Installer You can download Tweeten as a desktop app or install it as a Google Chrome browser extension if needed. And, to sweeten the deal it’s a free app. You have to run the TweetDeck installation as root, otherwise you will not be able to write to the /opt directory – that’s standard for Air applications, though I wasn’t able to write to /home/myuser either, although I had full rights to access that, so I guess the right place is actually /opt. Tweeten is an excellent alternative for users who favor standalone desktop client apps instead of web apps like TweetDeck. Now here’s where I got the permissions issues. Then, download the latest TweetDeck Air application for Linux. Run it using your root account – that should install Adobe Air and some utilities for Air application management, just like Windows would (I guess). Go get the latest Adobe Air from the official Adobe Air website and save it somewhere. It took me about 20 minutes to figure this out, I just had some permission issues (error 5100). Hey just got TweetDeck running on my Fedora 10 Laptop. Hey there! I'm currently working on a CLI tool to deploy WordPress apps to DigitalOcean.
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