Apple Boss Tim Cook Has Frustrating Response for iPhone and Android Users Complaining About the Green Text Bubble

 Apple Boss Tim Cook Has Frustrating Response for iPhone and Android Users Complaining About the Green Text Bubble

Apple Boss Tim Cook Has Frustrating Response for iPhone and Android Users Complaining About the Green Text Bubble

Apple President Tim Cook burst a great deal of Android user’s green bubbles when asked about messaging among iPhones and Android. BroBible was at a media occasion for the company where they were talking about their latest release of iOS 16. During that talk, a journalist asked about sending messages and photos between their iPhone and their mother’s Android gadget. While Cook could sympathize a little, he won’t make any promises. iMessage users have long used that “green air pocket” distinction as a status marker. Despite the fact that it would make sense to run everything on the same protocols for text messaging, there is a reluctance on the two sides of this issue to yield. So, we sit at a stalemate until someone inevitably caves later down the line. BroBible managed to transcribe the exchange where Cook managed to get a humdinger about purchasing the woman an iPhone in there for great measure. This is what he had to say.
“I don’t hear our users asking that we put a great deal of energy in on that at this point. I couldn’t want anything more than to change you over completely to an iPhone,” he said before joking, “Purchase your mother an iPhone.”
In happier news for iMessage users, they can now alter or unsend messages when the need arises. As a part of iOS 16, users can unsend a message for two minutes. On the off chance that you just have to alter out a grammatical mistake or something, that can be finished for 15 minutes after the initial message was sent. A great deal individuals have been requesting this functionality all across the web for years now. Despite concerns from both security analysts and just general innovation experts, companies seem to listen their user bases. (Fortunately, when you unsend a message, it leaves the beneficiary a note that there was something tossed their way and then brought back in.) This is the way Apple heralds their new feature.
“Updates to Messages make it possible to alter, fix send, and mark conversations as unread, making it much easier to stay connected.1 With iOS 16, users can now welcome friends and family to SharePlay via Messages, offering another way to appreciate synced content like movies or songs and shared playback controls. In addition, new collaboration features in Messages make working with others speedy and seamless. At the point when users choose to share files for collaboration through Messages, everybody in a thread will be automatically added, and when someone makes an alter to the shared record, activity updates appear at the top of the thread.”
“You can now alter a message you just sent or unsend a new message altogether. And you can mark a message as unread if you can’t respond at the time and want to come back to it later. Everybody has equal permissions for adding, altering, and erasing photos in the shared library. Favorites, captions, and keywords sync too, so assuming one person organizes the assortment, everybody benefits.”