With new WhatsApp feature, users will be able to easily navigate within videos they receive or send
Meta-owned chatting platform WhatsApp keeps rolling out new features and updates to the app and the has lately been on introducing new tools for videos.
This time around, "WhatsApp is rolling out a feature to skip forward and backward videos", WABetaInfo reported.
The feature launched with the version update 2.23.24.6 for Android, will make watching lengthy videos shared on the app more convenient and time saving than ever.
“Specifically, users have long been requesting new tools to have better control over playing videos, and it appears that their feedback has played a pivotal role in the development of a new feature,” the WhatsApp news tracker said.
With this feature, the users will be able to easily navigate within videos they receive or send, especially the longer ones without the hassle of dragging the play head to the required point in a clip.
As you can see in this screenshot, it is now possible to skip forward and backward videos by double-tapping the left or right side of the screen.
This means you can now skip to the most crucial part of a video or rewind to rewatch something you might have missed without using the progress bar.
“This feature operates in a manner similar to how it works on YouTube, making it familiar and intuitive for users who are already accustomed to navigating videos on the popular video-sharing platform,” WABetainfo stated.
As per the article, this feature not only saves time but also enhances content navigation as users can easily rewind to revisit a particular moment or fast forward to skip past less relevant parts.
The feature will be rolled out to even more people over the coming weeks.
Ai-Da's artwork is the first by a humanoid robot to be sold at auction, fetching over $1 million
If picked up by ChatGPT’s 500m weekly users, OpenAI’s browser could pose a serious threat to a core stream of...
Yaccarino says it is her decision, though Musk has a history of dismissing deputies suddenly
Change is expected to impact how 170m US users access global content, how non-US creators make money on the platform
Newly found fossils 209m years old and include at least 16 vertebrate species, seven of them previously unknown
X's statement contradicts India's claim that no Indian govt agency ordered Reuters accounts withheld, says Reuters