<p>Twitter is finally working on a new feature that will allow users to post long-form content on the platform that currently allows posts with only 280 characters.</p>.<p>With 'Twitter Notes', the users will be able to create articles using rich formatting and media, which can then be tweeted and shared with followers upon publishing, reports <em>TechCrunch.</em></p>.<p>Currently, the feature is being tested with a select group of users and the company will launch it soon.</p>.<p>App researchers like Jane Manchun Wong spotted the new feature in the development, and was earlier called "Twitter Article".</p>.<p>"Twitter's new artwork for the "Notes" (Twitter Articles)," app researcher Nima Owji said in a recent tweet.</p>.<p>At the moment, Twitter users have to write long-form content in the form of broken threads which may be jarring for people to read.</p>.<p>Apart from writing Twitter threads, users also write long-form content on other apps, make a pdf or a jpg file, and then take a screenshot and post it on Twitter.</p>.<p>Twitter Notes will save both the problems by allowing users to instead write long-form articles directly on the platform itself, the report said late on Tuesday.</p>.<p>"Like tweets, the Notes would have their own link and could be tweeted, retweeted, sent in DM's, liked and bookmarked," it added.</p>.<p>When publishing 'Twitter Notes', users could check or uncheck boxes to automatically tweet the article to their feed, Twitter Circle or Communities.</p>.<p>They can also copy the article URL for sharing elsewhere, like on another website or in an email, according to app researchers.</p>.<p>The tool will be accessible from users' profiles directly to the right of the "Tweets & replies" link and before "Media".</p>
<p>Twitter is finally working on a new feature that will allow users to post long-form content on the platform that currently allows posts with only 280 characters.</p>.<p>With 'Twitter Notes', the users will be able to create articles using rich formatting and media, which can then be tweeted and shared with followers upon publishing, reports <em>TechCrunch.</em></p>.<p>Currently, the feature is being tested with a select group of users and the company will launch it soon.</p>.<p>App researchers like Jane Manchun Wong spotted the new feature in the development, and was earlier called "Twitter Article".</p>.<p>"Twitter's new artwork for the "Notes" (Twitter Articles)," app researcher Nima Owji said in a recent tweet.</p>.<p>At the moment, Twitter users have to write long-form content in the form of broken threads which may be jarring for people to read.</p>.<p>Apart from writing Twitter threads, users also write long-form content on other apps, make a pdf or a jpg file, and then take a screenshot and post it on Twitter.</p>.<p>Twitter Notes will save both the problems by allowing users to instead write long-form articles directly on the platform itself, the report said late on Tuesday.</p>.<p>"Like tweets, the Notes would have their own link and could be tweeted, retweeted, sent in DM's, liked and bookmarked," it added.</p>.<p>When publishing 'Twitter Notes', users could check or uncheck boxes to automatically tweet the article to their feed, Twitter Circle or Communities.</p>.<p>They can also copy the article URL for sharing elsewhere, like on another website or in an email, according to app researchers.</p>.<p>The tool will be accessible from users' profiles directly to the right of the "Tweets & replies" link and before "Media".</p>