Both clients offer syncing, however these two differ here. You can also manage multiple Twitter accounts and use all the Twitter features you know and love - like searching and pinning searches, retweet, favorite, etc. You can of course view your timeline, single tweets and media previews. I don’t have a sample for Falcon Pro to test that on Android, because the Nexus 7 is smaller than the iPad mini 2.īoth clients offer nearly identical features. Additionally I don’t think Echofon Pro uses the space it has in the best possible way (a second column for mentions would have been nice). I do appreciate both designs, however, I like Falcon Pro more in terms of aesthetics personally. Falcon Pro on the Nexus 7.īoth apps give 100% in looking native on their respective platforms but Falcon Pro goes the extra step of customizing the experience instead of just using the default template like Echofon Pro does. So here is my comparison for today: Echofon Pro on the iPad vs. For my Mac the official client is well enough but not for my mobile needs. These points just scratch the surface of my problems with it but I won’t go into detail in this post. Instagram…) and I don’t like the design of the client on both platforms. I don’t like the fact that it doesn’t dispaly every media type in-line (i.e. I don’t hate it but it just doesn’t suit me well enough. I really don’t like the official Twitter client.
#Mobiworld spam in echofon android#
This led me to the idea to compare apps that aren’t available on Android to apps that aren’t available on iOS (in the tablet sector) to see, which platform offers the better alternative solutions to the same problem. If you’re a long reader of my blog you’ll already know that last week I became owner of a brand new iPad mini 2.