Ios 10 twitter tweak download video






















Next, scroll to the bottom of the page to find the Download Video link. Choose a resolution and click on the Download Video button. When you click on the button, the video will begin playing in full screen mode.

Again click on the share button and select Add to Home Screen. You will be asked to enter a name for the video. When you are done, click save. Now you will see a shortcut icon to the video on your home screen. This is as far as Apple will allow you to go and while it is not exactly a download, it is still something. Next, we will see how we can tweak these options to actually download and save the video to the Photos app. Instead of adding the video to the home screen, you can actually download the video using a file manager app.

MyMedia is a file manager app for iPhones that will allow you to manage files on your device. We all know how different managing files on iOS is when compared to Android which is much more user-friendly in this aspect.

MyMedia wants to add a similar functionality to your iPhone. Download and install it from the App Store. Go back to Twitter and copy the link to the video like you did in the previous step. This time, when you choose a format and click on the download button on the next page, you will see a pop up asking you to either Download the file or Open it.

You know what to do here. When you select Download, it will ask you to name the file. Once done, you will see the video in the Downloading section. Once the video is downloaded, you can view it anytime you want in the Media section. This is where all your downloaded videos will be saved. Make sure to give them suitable names. But we are still not done. Though you have downloaded the video, it still resides inside the MyMedia app and not in the camera roll.

To do this, go back to MyMedia app and long press on the video to reveal more options. Select Save to Camera Roll here. Open the Photos app and you will find your downloaded video there in the resolution you had originally selected in MyMedia. The app is free to use and download, and comes with bare minimum ads that are not obtrusive in any way. Many people use it to annotate docs, sync them in the cloud, and use it as a file manager.

Copy the link from Twitter just like you did in the first step and open Documents. Once inside, click on the compass button on the lower right of the screen to access the browser. You will now see download links with different resolutions. Click the one you want.

I am choosing x When you hit download, Documents will ask you to rename the file and choose a download location. Once you do, The Twitter video will be downloaded to your iPhone.

To save the video to your camera roll, go to Documents folder in the same app and click on the menu to reveal sharing options.

There is a reason why Apple makes it difficult to use features like these which are commonly, and easily, available on Android. Zeal is a battery management system for your jailbroken iPhone or iPad that makes it much easier to save power on demand. Among the things you can do with it are invoke Low Power Mode, lower screen brightness, and access toggles right from an Activator-invoked interface.

We recommend reading our full review of Zeal to learn more about it. To learn more about the scenarios where UsageBarX is handy, be sure to check out our full review.

Creamless is basically the exact opposite of Cream 2; rather than colorizing your Control Center toggle buttons, this tweak extracts the color away from them. It effectively makes the toggle icons simply glow white when enabled, and dim back to black when disabled. You can read our full review of Creamless to learn more about how it works.

If you get lots of notifications throughout the day, then your Home screen is probably peppered with red dots — those pesky notification badges. Confero 2 is a notification badge manager that puts all of your unread notifications in one place so that you can easily acknowledge them. Even better is that it can hide your notification badges from the Home screen while it does this, so you get a cleaner looking Home screen in the process.

ColorFlow 3 is a tweak that colorizes the Now Playing music player based on the dominant colors of the album artwork of any music you have playing. It impacts even the smallest details of the Now Playing interface, including the buttons, the knobs, the meta information, the Status Bar, and even the page dots on the Lock screen.

To learn more about ColorFlow 3, check out our full review before trying it out. If you have nostalgia for the way folders used to be prior to iOS 7, then ClassicFolders 2 is definitely worth your attention. This tweak lets you go back to page break-styled folders rather than the full-screen folders that debuted in iOS 7.

Complete with themes, you can go for something that looks like an older version of iOS or you can you can opt for a more modern look. Aerial is the latest release from Surenix, which allows you to colorize your Status Bar icons to be any color you want them to be. You can read our full review of Aerial to learn more about how it works and what we think about it. Acapella III changes the way you control your music as you listen to it, and it starts by adding new gestures to your Now Playing interface.

The simpler UI not only looks better, but the gestures let you take more advantage of the amazing touch screen on your device, rather than using touch-screen based buttons that remind you of the days when you used physical buttons to control your music. You can learn more about Acapella III in our full review. This tweak disables those visual cues that would normally give you away for recording people without their permission.

You can read our full review of discreetVoiceMemos to learn more about how it works. You can read our full review of Littlemoji to learn more about the tweak. Spin10 is a circular redesign for the Now Playing interface on the Lock screen that changes everything from the metadata, to the way the artwork is displayed.

The tweak takes the way you look at and interact with your music controls on your Lock screen to the next level by moving away from the traditional blocky style of music controls that feel the same as they always have in iOS since the beginning.

You can read our full review to see more about how Spin10 works and what we think about it. WeatherLock is a tweak that takes a relatively old idea and makes it feasible on iOS 10 — it enables the use of animated Weather app backgrounds as wallpapers on the Lock screen. Imagine waking up in the morning and looking at your iPhone only to see the weather conditions outside right on your Lock screen; now you know exactly what your day is going to look like.

You can read our full review of Cuttlefish to learn more about it. Rather than showing an exact time stamp, it shows an approximation, which makes things harder to follow.

This one lets you use 3D Touch gestures on your toggle buttons to get to their respective preference panes in the Settings app.

If you need to get to your Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, or Do Not Disturb preference panes quickly without navigating the Settings app, for example, then this tweak is for you. The tweak is currently a free download from Cydia, although adding a private repository is necessary. To learn more about how to get and set up SpecialFaces, you will want to read our full review. FingerTouch is a great tweak that I would categorize as a type of Activator-like jailbreak tweak designed specifically for the Touch ID sensor on your iPhone or iPad.

You can assign the gestures to a variety of actions, like toggling your flashlight or taking a screenshot, just to name a couple. PulseHUD is a free and very unique volume HUD replacement that removes all visual cues of your volume level from the screen in place of a pulsing animation in the center of your screen. This pulse animation occurs for each volume button press you perform, so if you press either the volume up or volume down button 3 times, you should see 3 pulses on your screen.

It works best in tandem with another tweak like StatusHUD 2 because this will let you see your current volume level while also enjoying the pulse animations. You can learn more about PulseHUD in our full review. For the most part, no one really uses these menus, and it has been requested time and time again for a jailbreak tweak to remove these menus to cut down on clutter.

You can read our full review of NoSharePlz to learn more about it and how to get it. It has always been kind of annoying that you have to go into the Settings app and dig through a number of settings just to get to the Low Power Mode toggle. You can read our full review of QuickPowerMode to see why this is something you should install. No one likes how cumbersome it is to go through the process to copy text and then paste it into a text field.

Pasithea 2 helps solve this problem by giving you a completely new way to manage your pasteboard right from your keyboard. This pasteboard lets you see all of your recently-copied text items and easily insert them into a text field with a tap. You can also favorite or delete items from the Pasithea keyboard, which makes pasteboard management both simple and secure.

You can read our full review of Pasithea 2 to learn more about it and how it works. You can read our full review of Moose to learn more about how it works. Gorgone is a free jailbreak tweak that enables Slide Over and Split View on unsupported devices, which includes those running iOS After you install this tweak, you can slide over from the right side of the screen to access your app picker, which lets you do into dual-app mode and see them running side-by-side.

You can read our full review of Gorgone to learn more about how it works. Safe Alarm 3 is basically the way alarms should have come out of the box on stock iPhones. For example, you can configure certain alarms to only go off on certain days of the week, choose custom volume levels for your alarms, configure a fade-in effect for your alarms, and even force yourself to solve a math problem to dismiss the alarm.

Among all of these features, you can exceed the function of your pitiful stock iOS alarm and actually be happy with it for once.



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