Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Mobile
  4. Legacy Archives

Twitter celebrates fifth birthday with one billion tweets per week

Add as a preferred source on Google

TwitterTwitter turns five this week. The microblogging platform has found incredible success in distilling the vast space of social networking down to one simple idea: 140-character status updates. The low level of commitment required to participate has inspired everyone from Luddites to celebrities to board the Twitter train and let their voices be heard in a public space.

To celebrate five years spent changing everything, a list of impressive statistics has been put up on the Twitter Blog in a post that is appropriately titled “#numbers.” It all started on March 21, 2006 when company founder Jack Dorsey — @jack — sent out the very first tweet: “inviting coworkers.” He certainly had no idea at the time that Twitter would catch on as it did.

Recommended Videos

Over the next three years, two months and one day, 999,999,999 more followed that innocent first tweet. Incredibly, the “billion tweet” milestone that took so many years to reach is now just a pocket change number; Twitter is home to more than one billion new tweets each week these days. The user base is increasing exponentially too, with an average of 460,000 accounts created per day over the past month. More people are microblogging on the go, too. The past year has seen a 182 percent increase in mobile usage on Twitter.

So in short… use Twitter. Everybody else is doing it.

Adam Rosenberg
Former Gaming/Movies Editor
Previously, Adam worked in the games press as a freelance writer and critic for a range of outlets, including Digital Trends…
Sega’s Virtua Fighter Crossroads is coming to Nvidia’s wild new RTX Spark PCs
Virtua Fighter Crossroads will help showcase gaming on Nvidia’s new RTX Spark platform
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Nvidia’s new RTX Spark platform has landed one of its first major games. Sega has confirmed that Virtua Fighter Crossroads will run on RTX Spark-powered laptops and compact desktop PCs when the game arrives in 2027. More Sega titles are also heading to the platform, although neither company has named them yet.

The announcement also marks more than 30 years of collaboration between Nvidia and Sega, a relationship that began when Nvidia’s NV1 graphics chip helped bring the original Virtua Fighter to PC. Sega later helped keep the young chipmaker alive by turning a $5 million payment into an investment when Nvidia was close to running out of money.

Read more
Lenovo’s new gaming laptop is the first to feature a 240Hz inkjet-printed OLED display
TCL’s inkjet-printed OLED technology finally reaches a commercial laptop through Lenovo
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

TCL has spent years saying inkjet-printed OLED could improve image quality, efficiency, lifespan, and manufacturing costs. Back in 2024, the company was still showing prototype laptop panels and promising a “comprehensive breakthrough” once the technology was ready for commercial products.

Two years later, it has finally arrived in a gaming laptop. Lenovo’s new Legion R9000P uses a 16-inch panel that TCL CSOT describes as the world’s first inkjet-printed OLED display integrated into a laptop.

Read more
This new Mac malware won’t let you use your computer until you surrender your password
This Mac malware turns your own computer against you
AI Generated Image

A newly discovered strain of macOS malware is taking social engineering to an unsettling new level. Instead of exploiting a software vulnerability or silently stealing information in the background, it simply refuses to let you use your Mac until you type in your login password.

Dubbed ClickLock, the malware repeatedly shuts down key macOS processes, disables notifications, displays convincing Apple password prompts, and effectively traps users in a loop that only ends when the correct password is entered. Once that happens, it doesn't just steal the password. It goes after browser data, cryptocurrency wallets, saved credentials, password managers, and much more.

Read more