iPad&iPhone user

iOS 14: Everything new in the Messages app

Messages in iOS 14 focuses on organizing your message list and keeping track of group messages. Jason Cross reports

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In many ways, Messages is the most important app on the iPhone. Obviously, sending and receiving texts is one of the most popular uses for smartphone­s, and it is a necessary part of many two‑factor authentica­tion set‑ups. But iMessage – the blue‑bubble Internet messaging platform introduced in iOS 5 – is a critical part of the Apple ecosystem. It solved a lot of the problems with texting at a critical time, and it is

important that Apple continues to make the ‘blue bubble’ as meaningful as possible.

With each new release of iOS, Apple makes some improvemen­ts to Messages. This year, iOS 14 will bring several welcome new features that recognizes the way people use it today. The focus is on organizing an increasing­ly big list of messages, and more clearly carrying on group conversati­ons. When you upgrade to iOS 14 this autumn (or participat­ed in the iOS 14 beta) these are the features you’ll find.

Better message filtering

In iOS 13, you can filter Messages from unknown senders by going to Settings > Messages and turning on Filter Unknown Senders. This will put iMessages

received from people who aren’t in your contacts into a separate tab and stops you from getting notificati­ons from them. Any SMS message or iMessage from someone in your contacts will go into a separate tab and still generate messages.

With iOS 14, Apple improves both the logic and the interface for this. With Filter Unknown Senders enabled, you will see a Filters selection in the upper left corner of the Messages screen. Tap that and you can switch between three views: All Messages, Known Senders, and Unknown Senders.

Known Senders is a list of both iMessages and SMS messages from people in your Contacts, as well as those from numbers you have recently called or sent the

first text to. You don’t need to add the plumber to your contacts if you called them and then got a text later on. Unknown Senders includes everything else, such as all those SMS verificati­on codes and spam texts.

Pinned conversati­ons

We get so many messages these days that the conversati­ons with people we most want to reach are often buried several screens down. Rather than hunting for your most important conversati­ons, you can pin them. You can swipe a conversati­on to the right to pin it, or long‑press and choose the Pin option. You can pin up to nine conversati­ons, and they’ll appear in circles at the top of your screen. Long‑press one to unpin it.

Pinned conversati­ons sync across iPhone, iPad and macOS (after the Big Sur update).

Inline replies

It can be hard to keep track of replies in group messages, or to reply to a message that someone sent earlier in your conversati­on.

In iOS 14, you can long‑press on any message and choose ‘reply’ to create an inline or ‘threaded’ reply. It will show up as the most recent message as it normally would, but users on iOS 14 will see the original message as well, with a little bracket connecting it, and a list of how many replies are in the thread. You can tap those to see and read the entire inline conversati­on.

The interface and design for this can be confusing, and Apple may polish it a bit before release, but it’s less confusing than trying to keep track of what everyone is talking about in a six‑person group message.

Mentions

A key part of most group chat software is the ability to grab someone’s attention with a ‘mention’ or ‘namecheck’. Now iMessages can do that, too.

Just type the name of anyone in the message and it will turn grey. Tap it to see a little name icon, and select that to turn their name into a Mention. It will light up blue with a fancy animation.

You can also simply type @name and it will immediatel­y become a Mention.

What’s the point? Well, group texts can really blow up your notificati­ons. It’s not uncommon for people to long‑press on a group message conversati­on and choose ‘hide alerts’ or swipe from right to left and tap on the bell icon. With Mentions, you have the option (in Settings > Messages > Notify Me) to hide notificati­ons for chats but still get one only when you are mentioned.

Customized groups

Groups no longer have to exist as a string of names in your message conversati­on list – in iOS 14 you can name them.

Simply open a group text, tap the round icon at top, and choose Info. From the Info page you’ll have the option to change the name and photo of your chat group, using a photo, bold text or Emoji and Memoji. The name and image will update for everyone else in the group. When people in the group chat, their images will show up around the edge of the group icon, with the most recent person to talk a little bigger and even a preview of their message. It’s a good way to get a visual indicator of the group activity when you don’t

have notificati­ons enabled for it and aren’t checking up on it constantly.

Emoji search

While it’s not specifical­ly a Messages thing, the iPhone keyboard in iOS 14 adds a feature that will probably be used in Messages more than any other app: a

search bar for the Emoji picker. Yes, the Emoji picker how has a search bar on top, so you don’t have to type a word in your text and then hope that the Emoji you want comes up in the predictive text line or else scroll through pages of little yellow faces to find what you’re looking for.

And it’s pretty smart, too: it doesn’t just look for a specific name, but surfaces all relevant Emoji. A search term like ‘birthday’ brings up the birthday cake and birthday face, but also the balloon, present, confetti, and so on.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Filtering messages is smarter, and there are no tabs to get in your way
Filtering messages is smarter, and there are no tabs to get in your way
 ??  ?? Pin conversati­ons so you don’t have to go scrolling to find the ones you use most
Pin conversati­ons so you don’t have to go scrolling to find the ones you use most
 ??  ?? Inline messages can be a little confusing, but not nearly as much as conversati­ons with no threads at all
Inline messages can be a little confusing, but not nearly as much as conversati­ons with no threads at all
 ??  ?? Mentions will let you ignore a group text until someone grabs your attention
Mentions will let you ignore a group text until someone grabs your attention
 ??  ?? Groups can have customized names and images, and the latest activity shows around the edge
Groups can have customized names and images, and the latest activity shows around the edge
 ??  ?? The Emoji picker finally has its own search, and it’s really good
The Emoji picker finally has its own search, and it’s really good

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