Twitter Debuts New 'Recap' Feature That Makes It Feel More Like Facebook It's meant to help you catch up on the most popular and relevant tweets you may have missed since you last signed onto the platform.

By Laura Entis

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Bloomua / Shutterstock.com

While Facebook is a curated garden, showing you posts it deems most relevant, Twitter is more like a river: You can always get your feet wet, but it's virtually impossible to keep up with the inundation of tweets streaming through the network in real-time.

Now, however, Twitter has launched a new Recap "while you were away" feature. The purpose is to highlight tweets it deems particularly relevant (determined by "engagement and other factors") that you may have missed when you stepped away from the micro-blogging site. The number of curated tweets you'll see each time you check in depends on the amount of time you typically spend on – and away from – the platform. "If you check in on Twitter now and then for a quick snapshot of what's happening, you'll see this recap more often," Twitter wrote in a post announcing the feature. "If you spend a lot of time on Twitter already, you'll see it less."

Related: Twitter Is Selling Ad Space in Your Following List

The Recap feature has already rolled out on Twitter's iOS app and will come to Android and web versions in the next couple weeks.

For now, it appears there's no way to turn off the feature, although if you frequently dismiss highlighted tweets, you'll be shown them less often, according to The New York Times.

Unlike Facebook, where chronology plays only one part in a host of factors that ultimately decide which posts you see, Twitter has always treated chronology as sacrosanct (hence your Twitter stream is a "timeline.") With the rollout of the Recap feature, Twitter is experimenting with ways to highlight important information a la Facebook while maintaining its real-time immediacy.

Related: Instagram Treats Users to Five Fresh, New Filters

Laura Entis is a reporter for Fortune.com's Venture section.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business News

McKinsey Is Using AI to Create PowerPoints and Take Over Junior Employee Tasks: 'Technology Could Do That'

Over 75% of McKinsey employees now use the internal AI tool Lilli, which safely handles confidential information.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Business Culture

I Scaled a 500-Person Company on Hustle — But Wellness Made It Sustainable (and More Profitable)

This CEO's mindset shift reveals how daily wellness habits can fuel better leadership, stronger teams and lasting business growth.

Business News

'Building It Ourselves': Morgan Stanley Created an AI Tool to Fix the Most Annoying Part of Coding. Here's How It Works.

Morgan Stanley first introduced the AI tool in January, and it has since saved developers 280,000 hours of work.

Leadership

I've Been Studying Ultra-Successful Businesspeople for Over 30 Years. Here's What Truly Sets Them Apart.

Here's a look at the qualities that set billionaires apart from regular entrepreneurs, including relentless drive, emotional intelligence and a strong tolerance for risk.

Buying / Investing in Business

How Trump's Tariffs Are Reshaping Startups and Venture Capital

Trump's 2025 tariffs have disrupted startups and VC markets, forcing founders to adapt through supply chain pivots, sector shifts, and alternative financing.

OSZAR »