Skip to main content

Twitter now lets you create your own Moments on mobile

twitter moments general roll out debuts its editor curated news stream
Twitter users can now create their own slideshow stories, dubbed “Moments,” on the platform’s mobile apps. The company capitalized on the feature in late September by allowing general users to compile Moments on the desktop version of Twitter. In the past, the feature was limited to select influencers, publishers, and brands.

If you’re unfamiliar with Twitter Moments, it is a curated feed of tweets relating to a newsworthy topic that lets you follow the event instead of the accounts covering it. Twitter has its very own Moments account, from where you can follow all the major news feeds. Moments can also be accessed via a stand-alone app, for those who want to simply tune in to live events without the hassle of maintaining a Twitter presence.

Mobile users can create a Moment by clicking on the grey arrow above a tweet, and then selecting “Add to Moment” from a pop-up tab. The feature is rolling out on Twitter’s apps starting today.

On desktop, you can create a Moment by heading to your profile page and clicking the “create new moment” button. You will then be directed to the curation page, where you can set a title for your Moment, add a cover image, add your own tweets, search for tweets, or choose from tweets you’ve liked. Keep in mind, Moments support multimedia content, meaning you can add tweets that contain images, videos, GIFs, and Vines — no need to worry about tweet length, as visual media no longer counts toward those precious 140 characters.

Just hit publish when you’ve finished the curation process and a tweet will pop up containing a link to your Moment, which you can then share with the rest of Twitter. If you don’t have time to complete your masterpiece, just click the “finish later” button to save it as a draft. Once shared on your timeline, your stories will also be accessible within their own Moments tab on your profile. Additionally, you can also embed Moments on other websites. If you need some tips on how to get started, Twitter has you covered.

https://twitter.com/twitter/status/781160119358763008

Managing the influx of new Moments could make or break the feature. The added visibility they will receive within a distinct tab on a user’s timeline indicates Twitter wants them to be noticed.

“To date, Moments have been created by our curation team and a select group of publishing partners but it’s always been our goal to open up this creative canvas to more people,” Twitter product manager Gaby Peña wrote in a blog post. “By extending this creative format … to everyone on Twitter, we are giving people a new and dynamic way to tell their stories.”

The ability to promote, and explore, a general event using multimedia tools such as images, videos, and GIFs on a popular social network is Moments biggest selling point. Beyond that, its wider reach is open to debate. Curating tweets isn’t exactly as spontaneous as snapping stories on Snapchat. This could impact its daily use, and prove a critical factor in its wider adoption. However, Twitter’s hardcore fan base should relish the feature, which finally allows them to collect and share posts from specific events and occasions (or just a recent set of their best tweets) and store them in one convenient location.

Updated on 11-30-2016 by Saqib Shah: Added news of mobile rollout of Twitter Moments.

Editors' Recommendations

Saqib Shah
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Saqib Shah is a Twitter addict and film fan with an obsessive interest in pop culture trends. In his spare time he can be…
Twitter braces itself after source code leaked online
A stylized composite of the Twitter logo.

Parts of Twitter’s source code have been leaked online, according to a legal filing with the U.S. District Court of the Northern District of California.

First reported by the New York Times, the contents of Twitter’s source code -- the all-important software that powers the platform and makes it work -- showed up on GitHub, an internet hosting service for software development.

Read more
No joke: Twitter is taking away your blue check on April 1, unless you pay
Twitter logo in white stacked on top of a blue stylized background with the Twitter logo repeating in shades of blue.

Twitter will soon remove blue verification badges from any accounts that haven’t yet signed up to its premium service, Twitter Blue.

“On April 1st, we will begin winding down our legacy verified program and removing legacy verified checkmarks,” the social media company tweeted on Thursday.

Read more
If you have an Nvidia graphics card, your CPU may be suffering right now
Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090 GPU.

If you own one of Nvidia's best GPUs and you've noticed your PC performing worse than usual lately, the latest graphics driver may bear partial blame. That's because there's a bug with the current version of Nvidia drivers that increases CPU usage after exiting a game.

Nvidia has acknowledged the bug, and since, a fix has been released that fixed increased CPU usage with Nvidia GPUs.

Read more