WhatsApp for iOS finally lets you hit send when you lose connection in the subway
Good New for all Iphone Users!!
WHY IT MATTERS TO YOU
Your WhatsApp messages will finally send -- even when you don't have service.
I personally faced this thing many times!
The iOS version of the popular messaging app WhatsApp was given an update on 24 Jan 2017 that should be warmly received by anyone who frequently travels by subway or finds themselves in areas with spotty internet service. Now, users can queue messages for sending when a network connection isn’t available. Once a connection is reestablished, WhatsApp will now send all of those messages out automatically.
The Android app has had this capability since last year, as StackExchange forum users have pointed out, so this most recent update brings the iOS version to parity. Previously, the send button would only function when your iPhone was online. Post-update, the button is available at all times and pressing it queues the message. It’s a simple but essential tweak for those always on the go.
The app update also carries another much-requested feature: the ability to manage storage in specific chats. In the past, WhatsApp could display the amount of space occupied by different message types — like text, photos, and videos — but it lacked deep, granular control. Now, the Storage Usage screen within Settings has been expanded so users can delete by message type in individual conversations.
Rounding out the new features list, WhatsApp on iOS is now capable of sending out 30 photos or videos simultaneously, up from the previous limit of 10.
WhatsApp’s latest update comes weeks after the company had to refute a report from the Guardian that claimed to have found a security “backdoor” in the messaging platform. In reference to the allegations, WhatsApp told Digital Trends that the supposed flaw the Guardian was referencing was a deliberate design decision made to prevent “millions of messages from being lost.” Since then, various security experts have defended WhatsApp’s explanation, and the Guardian has amended the original article’s use of the word “backdoor.”is not fun when you accidentally send someone a message, but thanks to some sharp eyes, it appears as if WhatsApp might assuage those fears with the ability to recall and edit messages, XDA Developers reports.
Discovered in WhatsApp’s public beta, being able to recall and edit messages are not features that can be turned on — they are disabled by default, so they might not be ready for prime time. Even so, you can theoretically tap a message to then recall it, while you can edit a message through the overflow menu. It is unknown whether you have a certain amount of time to call back a message, but it will be nice to have these features for those prone to typos or for those times when you send a message to the wrong person.
Elsewhere, it appears as though WhatsApp will let you delete a status from the Status tab through a trash can icon in the action bar. Unfortunately, this feature is also disabled by default in the public beta, so folks might need to wait for a server-side update to get things rolling.
The upcoming features come as WhatsApp recently updated the iOS app version that includes the ability to queue messages, even when there is no Internet connection. The Android version has had that feature since 2016, so the update was more of a need to bring the iOS version to parity.
The news also come a few weeks after WhatsApp told Digital Trends that the security “backdoor” reported by The Guardian was deliberate. According to the company, this was to prevent “millions of messages from being lost,” with plenty of security researchers coming to WhatsApp’s defense and The Guardian altering its use of the word “backdoor.”
Post a Comment