for the past year, Twitter growing hunger spoke of the opportunity offered by what he called the "page Home logged-out "- that is, the page that you see when you visit Twitter.com and either are not logged in or do not have an account More people end up on what you might guess: Twitter last. reported 320 million active users, but said 500 million people visiting its Web site each month last year redesigned the Twitter page for visitors Office;. today, almost a year later, they roll to mobile visitors in 23 countries.
So far, visiting Twitter.com in a mobile browser will only display the login screen. The new home page displays a scrolling list of popular tweets from major accounts. A quick skim of the mine showed tweets Donald Trump, Kourtney Kardashian, ABC News and The Weather Channel. Each tweet is also marked by a category - "cute animals," "general information sources", "pop artist", and so on A module invites you to register or log constantly scrolls with you as you move. . in the scenario
it is well done, but I wonder how likely it is really in the homepage one hand, there is another place Twitter can put ads -. but because the viewer is not connected to an account, the ads are less targeted and less value then there is the fact that the mobile web is in decline and then there are the unintended consequences of movement.. -. better connected to create an experience for people less incentive they have to register for an account
That said, there is no reason not to try Twitter. It is strange that it took the company almost a year after the redesign of the desktop experience to bring it to mobile. But now it's here, and a quarter from now we will probably have an idea of how many new registrations it generates. If you already have a Twitter account, you can still see the new experience :. Just open Twitter.com in private browsing (aka "incognito") mode on your phone browser