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ideally tricks

Six WhatsApp features you probably don’t use




With over 1 billion active users globally as of April 2016, WhatsApp is pretty much indispensable. Some time ago, Facebook added the end-to-end encryption to the instant messenger, making it hard for anyone to snoop or intercept a WhatsApp chat. Then there was the desktop client for PCs, which linked to a user’s smartphone. Similarly, there are lot of other features which the WhatsApp app on your phone packs in, but you probably haven’t used them yet.

Save your messages forever

When a WhatsApp user switches to a new phone, he has to install and configure the WhatsApp account from the beginning. This doesn’t mean a user has to lose all the text and chat threads from his last phone. WhatsApp allows users to take backup of all your chats, images and videos on Google Drive at the time of configuring the account or even after it. Even if you don’t have a Drive account on your device, you can save your messages on Drive by going to settings->Chats->Chat backup.


Find your favourite messages

In case you wish to save a chat or a message there is an option called Starring. To access this option hold and long press any message or group of messages and the star icon will show on the top of the chat window. Tap on it and the selected message will be starred. You can access the starred message anytime in settings->starred messages. You can see all the starred messages at one place, so you forward it to others or go back to the chat threads around which the chat took place.

Sending messages made easy

If your smartphone runs Android Marshmallow, you can take advantage of Android Direct Share feature in WhatsApp. This means that a user can share a web page with their favourite groups or contacts from the share page itself. The share window automatically shows the contacts your are most active with on the share page. This saves the user a trip to WhatsApp for sharing a link.

Chat in Indian languages

WhatsApp is one of the few messenger apps which supports Indian languages, and lets users use them for messaging. While you can use the app in 12 Indian languages right away, you can send messages in Hindi, Urdu and Bengali. To change the language of the app go to settings->chats->app language. To change the language for sending messages go to phone settings->language and input-> keyboard and input methods and select Google Indic keyboard.

Find your favourites among the clutter

One of the predicaments of using WhatsApp is the many groups one is added even if one doesn’t wish to be there. This increases the length of the home page unnecessarily, making it difficult for one to figure out the chat group that a user actually wants to be on. You can create a shortcut of specific chat groups as if they were a separate app in itself. Press and hold any such chat group and a select create shortcut option from the pop-up window that shows up. This will add the shortcut on the homescreen and will show the profile picture of the group as the app icon. You can access the group right away. This feature can be used for individual contacts too.

Send messages to many users

This feature works on similar lines as sending an email to many users at once. You can send a common message to a group of people simultaneously. Just go to menu button on the main homepage of Whatsapp and select new broadcast. It will ask you the names and numbers of the receiver. Just tap on + icon and select the contact from the phone book.