From what I can gather this is Twitters own implementation of Web Intents which is a Web API loosely based on Androids Intents functionality. It looks like that Twitter are using a JavaScript implementation of Web Intents (possibly similar to this).
In this scenario, the Twitter JavaScript registers an intent
with the browser. The intent
being you sharing a URL. When the user clicks the tweet button the intent
activity is started and a new pop-up windows is displayed.
The user clicks the tweet button from the pop-up window and the browser posts back the event data to a callback specified when starting the activity. The callback is specified in the widget.js
and you hook up to this event using the twttr.events.bind
method.
There is a really good example of how this works on the JavaScript github implementation of WebIntents.
Usage
To use today
No browsers currently support this API natively. To use this system
simple drop the following code in to your site:
<script src="http://webintents.org/webintents.min.js"></script>
When browsers start to implement this natively the Shim will defer all
its functionality to the native interface.
Declaration
To register your service application to be able to handle image
sharing simply declare an intent tag.
<intent
action="http://webintents.org/share"
type="image/*" />
This will register the current page's ability to share images.
Invocation
To build a client application that can use the share functionality, it
is as simple as using the following code:
var intent = new Intent(
"http://webintents.org/share",
"image/*",
"http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f8/Three_jolly_kittens.png/800px-Three_jolly_kittens.png"
);
window.navigator.startActivity(intent);
Service
When a service is invoked via startActivity, the "intent" object on
window will be populated with the data provided by the client.
window.intent
That's it.
To send data back to the client that invoked it, it is as simple as
calling postResult() on the intent.
window.intent.postResult("something cool");
The example is obviously slightly different to the Twitter implementation but the general process is the same.
Here are few other references for the WebIntents API: