Google might finally be free young lesbian sex videosbringing its default messaging app on Android up to speed with Apple's iMessage.
No, the green bubbles (sadly) won't be going away, but Android users may soon have a way to exchange messages via their web browsers.
SEE ALSO: Making GIFs just got way easier thanks to Google's keyboard appIt looks like a future version of the app will include a web-based counterpart to the Android Messages app, according to code buried in the latest version of the Android Messages app that was unearthed by XDA Developers.
The code hints at a QR code-based system, that would allow Android users to link their phone and PC by scanning a QR code. It sounds like the feature would support a wide range of browsers, as XDA found references to Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Internet Explorer, Opera, and Microsoft Edge.
Google declined to comment, but it's well-known the company has been trying to improve its default messaging app for some time. Last year, the company announced it was working with carriers and device makers to implement a new messaging standard knowns as Rich Communications Services or RCS.
RCS allows messaging apps to support the more "enhanced" features, like stickers and GIFs and location-sharing, that most users have come to expect from modern messaging apps. The vast majority of messaging apps already use this standard, but Android Messages has been stuck on the much older SMS protocol.
That's a big part of why messaging on Android has been so fragmented. With the default texting app stuck in the stone ages, carriers and manufacturers have been bundling in their own variants -- some of which aren't much better than the default anyway. It's also why Google has had a confusing array of its own messaging apps, with Allo and Hangouts, both of which support messaging from browsers.
So it would make a lot of sense for Google to finally be implementing a browser-based version of Android Messages. It not only brings its app up to date with everyone else, it makes the whole experience a lot less painful.
Now, if they could just figure out a way to deal with those green bubbles.
Topics Android Google
YouTube just got more serious about its ad blocker crackdownThe best movies streaming on Paramount+Best fitness deal: Get a rowing machine for just $206 at AmazonCaitlin Clark's shockingly low rookie WNBA salary, explained'Shōgun's writers love all the Blackthorne and Yabushige memesBest free online courses from University of MichiganSpaceX books its first passenger to fly around the moonGoats like it best when you smile, new research showsEast Buy to join Taobao Live in an effort to expand consumer base: report · TechNodeThe best movies streaming on Paramount+China holds 49.4% of global new energy light vehicles market by Q1 sales · TechNodeGAC Group and TencentThe Space BetweenFish are friends, not food: Meet the world's first known omnivorous sharkPhone maker Honor may soon return to Google Mobile Services · TechNodeChina’s Hozon to start operations at a new EV parts plant in September · TechNodeTesla starts preHow to set boundaries in the early stages of datingAlibaba Cloud launches AI video creation tool Live Portrait · TechNode'Shōgun's writers love all the Blackthorne and Yabushige memes A Primer for Forgetting by Lewis Hyde Summer is Made of the Memory of Summer by Nina MacLaughlin How to Really Listen to Music by Rachel Ament On Excavation: The Paintings of Mark Bradford by John Vincler Sigrid Nunez’s Portraits of Animal Intelligence by Peter Cameron Eat This Book: A Food Dark Thread: An Interview with Kimberly King Parsons by Lauren Kane The Postmenopausal Novel by Darcey Steinke Fra Angelico’s Divine Emotion by Cody Delistraty Redux: Collectors of Clippings by The Paris Review Redux: Helpless Failed Brake by The Paris Review Susannah Hunnewell, 1966–2019 by The Paris Review On Warnings by Hanif Abdurraqib Redux: A Heat That Hung Like Rain by The Paris Review Participating in the American Theater of Trauma by Patrick Nathan The Caribbean’s Deadliest Fruit: A Taste Test by Jonathan Escoffery Whither The Golden Penetrators? by Dan Piepenbring The Woman of a Thousand Faces by Zachary Fine On Wingspan: Joan Mitchell’s Reach by John Vincler A Cultural History of First Words by Michael Erard
1.1827s , 10497.3671875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【free young lesbian sex videos】,Exquisite Information Network