With custom navigation, you can reduce the number of tabs displayed to two, or keep all five displayed by default — handy if you’re tired of stretching your finger over the Spaces tab just to get to your DMs and notifications . Twitter first started testing the Spaces tab on iOS last year and rolled out the tab on Android in May, which seemed to give struggling users just one more reason to sign up for the $2.99/month Blue subscription that launched last year. The Spaces banner now displays more information, such as Themes. Twitter Blue subscribers on Android can now customize their navigation bars. But Blue can’t save us from every feature that fills the app. Twitter announced last week that it’s going to start including more information in the banner that shows active Spaces at the top of your timeline. While there isn’t yet a setting to completely disable this banner (neither for free or Blue subscribers), it will now show who is hosting Space, who’s sharing a tweet on Space, and related Topics.