Technology

Twitter testing Search Subscribe feature that will send push notifications for search terms

Twitter is reportedly working on a feature called “Search Subscribe,” which will let users receive push notifications for new tweets matching a search query they choose. The feature was spotted developer Dylan Roussel. Screenshots shared Roussel shows Twitter’s bell notification icon on the search bar in its mobile app. According to Roussel, you can enter a search query and sign up for push notifications when relevant tweets are made.

Twitter is working on a feature allowing you to subscribe to search results. Once subscribed, you’ll receive push notifications for Tweets about your search query! 🤯 pic.twitter.com/plTlt484oN
— Dylan Roussel 🇺🇦 (@evowizz) May 31, 2022
Roussel hasn’t yet received a notification for any of the search queries he is subscribed to. This could be because the feature is still a work in progress and not yet functional. Currently, it has only been spotted in the latest version of Twitter Alpha. Similar functionality is available on Twitter’s own TweetDeck web client, which lets you create a column for a particular search term.Best of Express PremiumPremiumPremiumPremiumPremium

With news that Twitter could be looking at making TweetDeck an exclusive feature for its paid Twitter Blue subscribers, it is possible that the company is testing Search Subscribe as a paid feature. Search Subscribe could be Twitter what Google alerts is to Google Search.

I haven’t received any notification about a trending topic so far though. Either it’s not working yet (remember, I enable WIP features), or it only sends notifications periodically to avoid receiving a large number of tweets.
— Dylan Roussel 🇺🇦 (@evowizz) May 31, 2022
Of course, since this is an Alpha feature, we can’t quite be sure when or indeed, if the feature will be launching. But if it does, it could be quite useful to those users who are interested in a niche subject or topic and wants to be kept up to date about developments related to it. Also, since the feature isn’t yet fully operational, its mechanics aren’t clear either.

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