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Twitter raises message limit to 10,000 characters

“Twitter has eliminated the 140-character limit for DM, and users can now exchange messages privately of up to 10,000 characters, with the idea being that direct messages should seem limitless. 
Twitter aims to improve users’ messaging experience to give them the real estate to express themselves more freely and getting rid of the 140 character limit is just another step in that direction,” the company said in a statement.

The company announced in June that it planned to remove the 140-character limit from its direct messaging feature. DM allows users to have private conversations about the memes, news, movements, and events that unfold on the micro-blogging platform. “The aim is to make the private side of Twitter just as fulfilling as the public side,” the company said. Earlier this year, the company had launched Group Direct Messages, where multiple users could chat at once and any user could message another privately, irrespective of the fact that they might not be following each other.

The update will be available to all users worldwide, who log into Twitter.com, TweetDeck and Twitter-owned-and-operated applications. The company said it will support reading and writing long DMs for Android, Twitter for Mac and TweetDeck. Mobile web users will be able to receive long DMs, but not send them. “SMS DMs are still limited. If a user sends an SMS DM longer than 140 characters, Twitter will split it into multiple messages. While the first message will be sent as a DM in such a case, the remaining characters will post as Tweets,” it said.

Meanwhile, China’s Lenovo Group, the world’s biggest personal computer maker will lay off about 3,200 workers after profits more than halved in the second quarter of 2015, the company announced today, becoming the first Chinese firm to slash jobs. The job cut, which will be conducted in the company’s non-manufacturing <g data-gr-id="35">work force</g>, accounts for about 10 <g data-gr-id="36">per cent</g> of the non-manufacturing headcount and five percent of its total employees globally, according to a company statement filed to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, where it is listed, state-run Xinhua news agency reported. “In the face of financial results that did not meet expectations, Lenovo is undertaking broad, decisive actions -- including better aligning its businesses and significantly reducing costs,” the company said in a statement.

Lenovo saw profits attributable to its equity holders slump 51 per cent year on year to$ 105 million in the second quarter. The company suffered from a decline in global demand for PCs, which account for around a third of its revenue. Revenue from its PC business was down 13 <g data-gr-id="29">per cent</g> <g data-gr-id="31">year-on-year,</g> while its mobile sector- combining Lenovo and Motorola was up by 33 <g data-gr-id="30">per cent</g>. 
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