Two Years On, X Is Still Not Close to Its ‘Everything App’ Vision
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It’s not been almost two years since Elon Musk decided to re-name Twitter to X, which fulfilled a long-held dream that Musk had had of hosting an app at x.com.

Which is a weird ambition, but Musk had bought the x.com URL in the early 2000’s, and had held onto it ever since, in the hopes of one day launching an all-encompassing, payments-based app. Called “X.” Because he really likes the letter x evidently.

So, how has the X rebrand gone, and is X now on a path to becoming the “everything app” that Elon had once envisioned?

Well, kind of. I guess. Depending on how you view it.

First off, on the X rebrand, as reported by Sherwood, Google searches for “x login” recently exceeded search traffic for “twitter login” for the first time since the renaming.

Which is a good sign, right? That means that more people are now recognizing the app as X, which is a big step.

Though this is only web traffic, and given that the vast majority of X usage is on mobile, it’s only tangential searches for the login page that are likely coming in via search engines.

But those users are also less likely to be regulars, and that, again, points to the rebrand taking hold, in at least some capacity.

I mean, X itself isn’t really helping, with a heap of its documentation still referring to “Twitter” and “tweets.” But Elon stated that he was confident that users would eventually forget about Twitter, because X would be so much better.

I don’t know that it’s fulfilled that promise, but it seems that people are now finally getting used to the new branding.

Which leads to the next question: Is X becoming the “everything app”?

No. No it is not.

Despite all the grandstanding and superlatives that Elon and X CEO Linda Yaccarino throw around, X, for all intents and purposes, is the same as Twitter was, with minor functional updates and changes that haven’t really impacted general usage.

Well, not in a positive way at least.

For example, X claims that it’s now a video platform, but there’s been little change in focus in the app to better amplify video content, and it hasn’t announced many significant video deals, outside of its initial set of partnerships.

It did add a new video tab earlier this year, but a video-first platform would open to a video feed first, right?

X’s payments initiative, meanwhile, still hasn’t got off the ground, with Elon and Co. still working to get full licensing clearance in order to enable the first stage of its in-stream payments push.