Twitter Fleets Now Rolling Out Globally, Audio Spaces Coming to Select Users Soon, ‘Working Hard on’ Android Voice Tweets

Fleets, audio tweets, and audio spaces are part of Twitter’s efforts to make it easier for people to engage on the platform.

Advertisement
By Gopal Sathe | Updated: 17 November 2020 18:30 IST
Highlights
  • Twitter is rolling out Fleets to users around the world now
  • It first tested the feature in India, Brazil, Italy, and South Korea
  • It also previewed Audio Spaces, an audio chat room
Twitter Fleets Now Rolling Out Globally, Audio Spaces Coming to Select Users Soon, ‘Working Hard on’ Android Voice Tweets

Your Fleets will be shown to all the people that follow you on Twitter

Photo Credit: Twitter

Twitter is rolling out Fleets globally, after initially testing the feature in India, Brazil, Italy, and South Korea. Twitter did not share any numbers for usage of the feature, but Joshua Harris, Twitter's Director of Design, said in a virtual press conference that Fleets have been useful in making people more comfortable on the platform. “We've seen Fleets helped people feel more comfortable sharing personal and casual thoughts, opinions, and feelings.” Aside from the Fleets rollout, Twitter also talked about Audio Spaces, an upcoming feature that it will be testing with a limited set of users, which will allow them to hold discussions in a public, yet intimate setting where they can control who is able to participate.

“A lot of people don't tweet. With retweets and replies, it feels like a burden to tweet. People lurk, draft tweets, and then do not send them,” Harris said. “Fleets create a lower pressure way to join the conversation. It'll make people more comfortable to join the conversation, because it's just for a day, and it won't be around forever. We've also seen more people joining conversations on Twitter, and we've seen that people new to Twitter are more comfortable.”

Fleets launched in India in June and while Twitter says it sees more people engaging with the platform, at least anecdotally, we've seen the usage of the feature go down in the interim. While the feature is ephemeral, and displays in a separate feed on top of the timeline that Twitter refers to as the Fleetline, there's nothing stopping others from taking screenshots of your fleets, and users don't even get notified. You also can't control who can see your fleets — these are features that Harris said the company is considering, but in the more immediate roadmap, Twitter will be adding stickers, more creator tools, and live broadcasting, he said.

Aside from Fleets, Twitter also showed a glimpse of an upcoming feature it calls Audio Spaces, which is a voice chatroom. Maya Patterson, a Product Designer at Twitter, explained that the new feature is meant to create a safe space for intimate conversations in public.

Advertisement

Twitter's Audio Spaces will first be rolled out to select users
Photo Credit: Twitter

Advertisement

“Voice tweets allow people to share their thoughts, but we imagined a live audio space to communicate with one other person or small groups,” Patterson said. “A space that feels very safe and intimate. We've used the metaphor of a well-hosted dinner party. You don't need to know everyone at the party to have a good time, but everyone should feel comfortable to sit at the table.”

“Safety is critical and we need to get that right in order for people to leverage live audio spaces, so we're going to launch this first experiment to a very small group of people, who are disproportionately impacted by harm on the platform — women and people from marginalised communities — and the team is interested and the company is interested in hearing first from this group of people on their feedback on audio spaces,” she added.

Advertisement

The feature will not just be a voice chatroom though — according to Patterson, users will be able to add tweets, and view transcriptions in these spaces, so that it can be used in a number of ways.

Audio Spaces will roll out to select groups first for testing and feedback before a wider rollout. Patterson also said that Voice DMs are being tested by the company, and added that voice tweets and all media will soon get transcriptions to improve accessibility on Twitter.

The team also said that the voice tweets feature is coming to Android but did not share further details, except to say that they're working hard to make that happen.

These new features come as a part of Twitter's attempts to make the platform more accessible to new users, although a more cynical view would be that the company is playing catch-up to others. The stories feature has been a feature of almost all platforms by now — even LinkedIn! — and voice chatrooms have also been growing in number since the launch of Clubhouse.


Which is the best TV under Rs. 25,000? We discussed this on Orbital, our weekly technology podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or RSS, download the episode, or just hit the play button below.

Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.
 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: Twitter, Fleets, audio spaces, voice tweets
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. OTT Releases of the Week: Truth or Trouble, Motorheads, and More
  2. Sneaky Links: Dating After Dark Now Streaming on Netflix: What You Need to Know
  3. Tecno Pova Curve 5G India Launch Date Announced
  4. Xiaomi 15s Pro Design, Camera Details Teased Ahead of Launch Today
  5. Dyson Announces PencilVac As Its Slimmest Vacuum Cleaner to Date
  1. SpaceX Successfully Launches 23 Starlink Satellites on Brand-New Falcon 9 Rocket
  2. Polaris Wasn’t Always the North Star: How Earth’s Wobble Shifts the Celestial Pole
  3. Scientists Warn of Inadequate Solar Storm Forecasting: What You Need to Know
  4. NASA’s Perseverance Explores Mars' Oldest Rocks in Krokodillen Region
  5. New Study Uses AI to Reveal Dry Origins of Mars’ Mysterious Slope Streaks
  6. Ancient 14,000-Year-Old Solar Storm Revealed as Strongest Ever Recorded in Earth’s History
  7. New Study Confirms TeV Halos Are Common in Middle-Aged Pulsars
  8. Capuchin Monkeys Abduct Baby Howler Monkeys on Panama’s Jicarón Island, New Study Reveals
  9. Sneaky Links: Dating After Dark Now Streaming on Netflix: What You Need to Know
  10. Devika & Danny OTT Release Date Revealed: When and Where to Watch It Online?
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.