Until now, adding one image to a tweet turned the photo into an automatic cropped message when it was posted on the internet. This feature was widely disliked because it ruined the experience of scrolling a timeline, and being able to view images without adding any contact. Twitter dropped the auto-cropping feature on iOS and Android in May, but it was now a web-only service. However, this week it disappeared, and internet users will see full images now. That was confirmed by the Twitter Support tweet. It explained that the tweet looks good in the tumbler? That’s how it’ll look on the timeline. Artists sharing their work on Twitter will be especially happy with this change, but everyone will benefit from having to click less to view content. If you choose to go and look at an e-book, you can use an iphone or a tablet to see a larger version, but you know what the image is, instead of having half of it hidden until the tweet is expanded.