Twitter’s Infamous Egg Avatar Has Been Replaced

What has been the face of Twitter trolls and newbies alike for 7 years is now a thing of the past, as Twitter drops the egg as their default profile photo and replaces it with a generic portrait figure, as many other sites use.

In a blog post, Twitter shared a brief history on the design of the image, relating the egg photo given to new users who go on to become regular Twitter users and an egg hatching into a bird. The image, a white egg against a colorful background, was first introduced in 2010 and succeeded 3 other default profile photos.

The microblogging site’s design team also explained their reasoning for the change, including highlighting the company’s commitment to recognizing different groups of users around the world by prompting self-expression among users through their profile photos. Some users also chose to keep the previous egg image because they liked the look of it, so the new default photo is meant to more apparently serve as a placeholder as encouragement to replace it. Twitter also briefly addressed the fact that accounts are often solely made to harass users, so a correlation between anonymous harassment from “egg” users negatively affects new users who have not yet uploaded a profile photo.

Several iterations of the design were considered after key traits were identified. A grey figure was chosen for being generic, universal, and temporary so that users would want to change it. A high color contrast was used to aid visually impaired users in seeing the image. The coloring also serves to give profiles with the default image less prominence than users with unique profile photos.

The figure is reminiscent of the iconography plastered on restroom doors indicating male and female restrooms. To avoid users associating the new avatar with a specific gender, the head, shoulders, and height were altered.

Avatar revisions can be seen from start to finish below:

Twitter Design Blog

 

 

 

Twitter No Longer Includes Usernames in Replies, Giving Users a Full 140 Characters

With a new update, Twitter will now allow users to reply to other users’ tweets without the person’s @ username taking characters away from the 140-character limit.

Tweets are limited to 140 characters, and previously, when a user replied to a tweet to say, @Twitter, the tweet would be reduced to 132 characters before beginning to write the tweet. Now, the username or usernames that are being replied to will appear above a tweet and be displayed as, “Replying to @Twitter”.

This will only be the case if users click the “Reply” option on a tweet, not if users “Mention” a user by composing a tweet on someone’s profile, or composing a tweet then adding the username. Replies to a tweet will appear in a user’s reply notifications, and mentions will continue to appear in mentions notifications.

Threaded tweets and conversations, will display “Replying to” when viewing an individual tweet from a browser or app but opening the thread will lose the “Replying to” text and can be identified by a line connecting the replier’s avatar to the original tweet’s avatar. The difference can be seen in the examples below:

Embedded tweets are absent of both the text and connecting line, showing the original tweet and reply together; it also does not display the number of replies:

Mobile Twitter apps must be updated before the change in replies will be applied.

When replying to a tweet, users have the option of removing certain users from the conversation by de-ticking the check mark next to their name, blocked accounts will appear in the list of users in the conversation but replies will not be sent to them. These names can be accessed by clicking the “Replying to” text.

To add a new username into the conversation, users must swipe the username list down, and manually write the @ username in, which will affect the character limit. Up to 50 usernames may be included in a conversation, but only when cumulatively added through replies, not counting additional usernames that fit in the character limit when written in.

According to Twitter, the replies to a tweet are ranked. This means users are shown Tweets from the original poster, or from people you follow first, not in chronological order.