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Tuesday 29 August 2017

15 Things You Didn't Know You Could Do With WhatsApp

15 Things You Didn't Know You Could Do With WhatsApp
Find out who your WhatsApp BFF is.
1. Find out which people you've interacted with the most.
2. When someone mentions a date, create an event so you don't forget.
3. Swipe on a message to quote it.
Instead of long-pressing a message, and then selecting "Reply" to quote the message, you can simply swipe right on a message and WhatsApp will automatically do it for you.
Granted, this only saves you about a second. But if you're a serial quoter, you're saving, like, 25 seconds a day. That's like, 9,000 seconds a year.
Two-and-a-half hours of time saved every year. Now you can re-watch Pulp Fiction. Thank me later.
4. Access WhatsApp's giant-ass secret GIF library.
Who knew that WhatsApp had a gigantic library of GIFs, and it was right under our noses all this time?
* Go to any chat, and click the "+" icon on the bottom left.
* Click on "Photo & Video Library" from the popup menu.
* Click on "GIF" on the bottom left to unleash a plethora of reaction GIFs.
5. Or just use WhatsApp to turn your videos to GIFs in a jiffy.
* Go to any chat, and click the "+" icon on the bottom left.
* Click on "Photo & Video Library" from the popup menu.
* Select a video from your library (make sure it's under the WhatsApp limit of 64MB).
* In the video editing view, slide the video length cropper down to 5 seconds or less (because which monster wants GIFs longer than that anyway).
And that's how you can easily turn your videos into a GIF. EVERYTHING IS BETTER WHEN IT'S LOOPED.
6. Send someone a WhatsApp message without actually typing anything.
Shayan Roy
WhatsApp works with Siri (for iOS) and "OK Google" (for Android)!
Say "Hey Siri" or "OK Google", and then ask them to "send a WhatsApp to" followed by the name of your contact, and then say "saying", followed by your message.
Then tell them how you sent them a WhatsApp without typing in a single word. Because these things need to be discussed.
7. Create your own "notes" chat where you can save photos, links, voice clips, and... notes.
* Create a new group, and add any one other contact to it.
* Once the group is created, kick the other contact out.
* Explain to your contact why you have done this.^
Now you're in a group where you can record your musings. It's actually better than your "Notes" app, because it lets you record voice notes, click pictures, or take videos on the fly.
^This step is not mandatory. Not everything deserves an explanation.
8. Hide your phone number when using WhatsApp.
You'll need two SIM cards for this (preferably your current SIM and an older one), but if you're paranoid about people seeing your phone number on WhatsApp, it's worth it.
* Insert the old SIM and activate WhatsApp on it.
* Replace the SIM with the new one.
* When prompted, choose to go with the old number on WhatsApp.
Now nobody will be able to get your current number if they have you on WhatsApp.
Mind you, certain countries tend to put unused SIM cards back into circulation, so if you want to keep that old number, it might be a good idea to insert the old SIM into an old handset.
9. Save data when you're making calls through WhatsApp
* Click "Settings" on the bottom right of your WhatsApp screen.
* Click on "Data and Storage Usage".
* Enable the "Low Data Usage" toggle.
10. Use a ~cool~ typewriter font to impress your friends/crush.
* Go to the punctuations tab on your chat, and enclose your message with three of the ` character on either side.
(It's on the second page of punctuation marks for Android users, while iPhone users can find it by long-pressing the apostrophe character)
* Send the message, and it'll go through in a typewriter font.
* Say things like "Aaaaaa I just know deez tings, fam" when someone asks you how in blazes you did that shit.
11. Add custom notifications so you know who's messaging you without checking your phone.
If you're constantly receiving messages on your phone, and feel the need to check your screen to see who it is, here's a quick way to save some eye-time.
* Click on the name of any private/group chat to open up Contact Info.
* Click on "Custom Notifications" and select a unique tone for that chat.
Now you know who you're ignoring without even checking your screen.
12. Locate old group chats easily.
Instead of trying to recall the name of an old group chat, which might be a bit tricky, try this:
* Try to remember any one person who was on that group with you.
* Go to their chat, and click on their name to open up "Contact info".
* Scroll down to "Groups in common", and if the group is still active, you'll find it there.
13. Restrict what info people see when they add you on WhatsApp.
* Click "Settings" on the bottom right of your WhatsApp screen.
* Click on "Account".
* Click on "Privacy".
* Change your "Profile Photo", "About" and "Status" privacy settings to "My Contacts".
This will prevent anyone with your number from creeping on your WhatsApp info, unless you decide to add them to your contacts.
14. See who has read your message on a group chat, and when they've read it.
All you have to do is left-swipe on any message you've sent to a group chat, and you'll get a list of who has read the messages, and at what time. Even if everyone's deactivated their read receipts.
So talk to people only on groups. Screw those people who deactivate everything.
15. Prevent photos and videos on WhatsApp from taking over your phone storage (and your goddamn life).
* Click "Settings" on the bottom right of your WhatsApp screen.
* Click on "Data and Storage Usage".
* On the "Media Auto-Download" tab, select "Never" for photos, audio, videos, and documents (or whichever ones you prefer).
Now, instead of auto-downloading, you can choose which media to download simply by clicking on it when someone sends it to you. This also saves you a shit-ton of data.
Memorise all these new tricks, and get to textin'!

List of smartphone brands that could have the Android Oreo on their devices first

List of smartphone brands that could have the Android Oreo on their devices first

Just some days ago, we reported that the upcoming Android 8.0 or Android O will be called the Android Oreo. In the same article, major highlights and features of the new Android 8.0  Oreo operating system were listed.

While it is Google’s tradition to determine when details of any upcoming OS be announced, it is not in the company’s power to dictate which devices or set of devices launch or run the OS first. But they can speculate – tell which smartphone brands that could run the Android Oreo OS first; which will most definitely come to pass. I mean, it’s Google. “She knows basically all things”, as some would say.

In the same blog post that announced the Google Android Oreo, Google mentioned the company have commenced testing of the Oreo OS on the Google Pixel smartphones and Nexus 5X/6P.

According to Google’s VP of Product Management, Android and Google Play, Sameer Samat,

We’re pushing the sources to Android Open Source Project (AOSP) for everyone to access today. Pixel and Nexus 5X/6P builds have entered carrier testing, and we expect to start rolling out in phases soon, alongside Pixel C and Nexus Player.
He also noted that devices enrolled in Google’s Android Beta Program will receive the final version of the Oreo update.

Under the “Coming to a device near you” header, Sameer talked about Google’s collaborative effort with her mobile partners to release the Android Oreo OS their devices. Mobile brands that were mentioned include;

Essential
General Mobile
Nokia
Huawei
HTC
Kyocera
LG
Motorola
Samsung
Sharp
Sony 
The above names are smartphone brands that could run the Android Oreo OS first

Still going by the words of Sameer,

We’ve also been working closely with our partners, and by the end of this year, hardware makers including Essential, General Mobile, HMD Global Home of Nokia Phones, Huawei, HTC, Kyocera, LG, Motorola, Samsung, Sharp and Sony are scheduled to launch or upgrade devices to Android 8.0 Oreo.
In the above quote, we can see Google’s VP carefully playing around the words “Launch” and “Upgrade”.

I believe his aim was to be crystal clear that it is in the hands of all individual smartphone company to either send an OTA update to all previous device that are capable of upgrading to the Oreo 8.0 OS or launch new gadgets (smartphone, tablets etc) that runs the Android Oreo OS out of the box.

It is worthy of note to state that the following smartphone brands; LG, Motorola, HTC, Sony, Xiaomi, and OnePlus sent an OTA update to their devices before the end of 2016 following the release of the Android 7.0 Nougat OS around this same time last year (August 22, 2016).

In other news, it should be recalled that HMD Global (Nokia’s parent company and distributor) have, in the past, confirmed that the Nokia 3, Nokia 4 and Nokia 6 smartphones will receive the Android Oreo OS update. The Oreo on the flagship Nokia 8 device is however not confirmed yet but it will most likely get the update.