In its latest effort to improve the app, WhatsApp is set to enhance user experience with an upcoming update that allows users to add personalised messages to any forwarded content.
Meta's instant messaging app's new feature will enable users to concatenate a new message after the forwarded message in a future update significantly increasing the app's flexibility, WABetaInfo reported.
Currently this feature is available for beta testers using the latest WhatsApp beta for Android 2.24.25.3 update, which can be downloaded from the Google Play Store, with a broader rollout planned for the future.
Previously, users could only add messages to media files like images, videos, and GIFs, regardless of whether they had a caption. However, this update expands that capability to all types of forwarded content, including text messages, documents, and links.
This improvement gives users more freedom to communicate their thoughts and context more clearly.
It's important to note that users can also add a new message to content that wasn't originally forwarded, including simple text messages.
For example, if a user shares a text message with a contact, they can include an explanatory note or a personalised comment when forwarding it to a group chat, ensuring the message is clear.
This is particularly useful in case adding more context to a forwarded message is needed.
For example, if a user forwards a news article link, other users can now immediately add their thoughts or a summary, which saves them from needing to send a separate follow-up message.
Similarly, forwarding a text message can include additional details or instructions for the recipient, ensuring clarity and reducing the risk of misinterpretation.
New model proposes Phobos, Deimos resulted from wreckage of larger asteroid
Australia plans to trial an age-verification system that may include biometrics or government identification
Significant spike highlights growing reliance on VPNs to circumvent increasing digital restrictions in the country
Finding provides tangible evidence of extreme cosmic processes unleashing colossal amounts of energy
Neuralink starts study to assess brain implant’s impact on quadriplegics controlling devices by thought
To survive without internet in this day and age seems extremely difficult, says Islamabad-based journalist