Apple released the first public beta of iOS 18.2 on Wednesday, a little more than a week after the tech giant released iOS 18 ...
Although iOS offers a sizable library of emoji to choose from, there are times when you can't quite find the right character that encapsulates an expression you want to convey. Genmoji solves this ...
You can say goodbye to the dreaded “🥲 to ‘why the hell aren’t emoji reacts working?’” from iOS to Android with RCS.
RCS is also supposed to support emoji reactions from Android users, but it wasn't working properly when iOS 18 launched.
With the updated iOS 18, Apple seem to have enlarged the emoji set, for no discernible reason, and a great number of people ...
Emoji reactions sent from Android users no longer show up as a separate text. Apple improved cross-platform texting with RCS ...
According to The Verge, emoji reactions now display correctly on both iOS and Android. In their test, they sent reactions ...
They're a fun alternative to emoji and they're part of Apple's iOS as standard. You just need to know where to look. You can send them inside any app that accepts regular text. And they have ...
For instance, some folks feel the thumbs-up emoji is passive-aggressive. With iOS 18, you can use any emoji or sticker on your iPhone to react to messages, giving you more avenues to communicate ...
For example, Apple's AI-powered emoji generator Genmoji isn't included in this iOS update, so it'll be included in a future update. When Apple released iOS 18, it brought RCS messaging support to ...
Apple has fixed the issue of Android reactions appearing as separate messages on iOS, now showing them in-line with message bubbles, enhancing iPhone-Android messaging compatibility.
As is customary at this time of the year, Apple has updated iOS and iPadOS with new emoji. The emoji additions include two new shaking faces, a phoenix, a lime slice, a brown mushroom, and a broken ...