
In addition to traditional Twitter client features – such as composing and sending tweets, retweeting, direct messaging and embedded link shortening – ŰberTwitter for iPhone offers an important new feature called ŰberView that makes reading tweets faster and easier. Today, more than nine million users have downloaded ŰberTwitter, and they send approximately 10 million tweets a day with the app. Until now, ŰberTwitter has been exclusive to RIM’s BlackBerry devices, where it was one of the first Twitter client apps to be available for the platform and set the standard for features and functionality. ŰberTwitter, the world’s most widely used Twitter app for sending and reading tweets, announced today that a beta version of ŰberTwitter for iPhone is now available as a free download from the Apple App Store. ŰBERTWITTER, WORLD’S #1 TWITTER APPLICATION, BEGINS OPEN BETA OF IPHONE APP, INCLUDING ŰBERVIEW OF EMBEDDED LINKS FOR EASIER TWEET READING Today we are excited to announce that RIM has launched the official Twitter for BlackBerry app and can be downloaded for free at /twitter.Full official press release is as follows: When you talk about messaging and mobile phones, BlackBerry immediately comes to mind and it was no surprise to us that it has become one of the most popular mobile platforms for Twitter around the world. Twitter is a messaging service that connects people to real-time information all over the world. Thankfully, Twitter is perfectly suited to take advantage of all this goodness because of our mobile DNA and the service being designed for quick consumption of information and capturing Tweetable moments. The speed at which devices, applications, and networks are evolving is inspiring.



There has never been a more exciting time in the mobile industry than right now. Here's the post from Twitter: Official Twitter for BlackBerry App Now Available Friday, April 9, 2010

He specifically hinted that Twitter should probably be building its own mobile clients. Earlier this week, Twitter's top investor, Fred Wilson, warned that Twitter developers need to stop "filling holes" in Twitter's product and start building real applications.
