Skip to main content

Google’s Messages app will soon work better with iMessage

Android users will finally be able to interact more easily with emoji reactions sent by Apple iMessage users. Right now, if Google Messages app users message someone on Apple’s iMessage platform and they get a response with a reaction to the message, what they don’t actually get is an emoji. They instead get a  “Loved” or “Liked” text followed by the original message. However, this is about to change.

According to a report from Droid-Life, the Google Messages Beta is getting a new feature that allows a user to finally see a reaction from an iPhone user. The app now displays an emoji instead of a “Liked” text, and the Google app converts a reaction sent by an iMessage user to an appropriate emoji on Android. Up until now, the feature was in the testing phase with a limited number of users, but it has started rolling out in the beta for Google Messages.

Recommended Videos

If you are on Google Messages beta, you can toggle the new option by going to Settings > Advanced > Show iPhone reactions as emoji. It’s nice to finally see this implementation, but the feature isn’t perfect. A “laughing” reaction from an iMessage user will be displayed as an equivalent emoji (in this case, the “face with tears of joy” emoji for Android users). It’s essentially a translation that tries to find the closest suitable, appropriate emoji rather than a true integration.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Notably, the new feature also only works one way. An Android user cannot react to the messages sent by an Apple person using iMessage. As Android Authority notes, Apple will have to support the RCS standard or create its own workaround to support reactions on iMessage from Google Messages. We wouldn’t count on that happening anytime soon.

Prakhar Khanna
Prakhar writes news, reviews and features for Digital Trends. He is an independent tech journalist who has been a part of the…
Google proposes big changes for the future of Search and Android apps
Google Chrome on an Android phone.

Google’s ongoing antitrust tussle spawned a list of sweeping policy suggestions — including a proposed sale of the Chrome business — by the Department of Justice. The focus of the lawsuit centers on the Search monopoly, but it has serious ramifications for Android and the overall browser situation.

Now, Google has shared its own “remedies proposal” to the DOJ’s recommendations, which it claims are going “far beyond what the Court’s decision is actually about.”

Read more
Have an old iPhone or iPad? You can no longer use this iCloud feature
An iPhone 6S in gold held against a red pipe.

If you own an older iPhone or iPad, it may be time to consider upgrading. As of December 18, the minimum requirement for using iCloud backups is iOS 9 or later, as support for iOS 8 and earlier versions has ended. This information was initially communicated to Apple users in November.

As noted by MacRumors, while iCloud support for devices running iOS 8 or earlier has ceased, you can still create manual backups on a Mac or Windows PC. If your device is currently on iOS 8, but can upgrade to a newer version, your iCloud backup capabilities will be restored.

Read more
I replaced Google Assistant with Amazon Alexa and haven’t looked back
An Amazon Echo Show 5 on a shelf.

This time last year, I was about to move into a new house, and I made the decision to say goodbye to Google Assistant and hello to Amazon Alexa for all my smart home duties.

Now, almost a year later, I’m absolutely convinced it was the right thing to do, as it showed me how fuss-free smart homes can be — and how Assistant's unreliability had been holding me back.
What made me want to change?
Google Pixel Tablet Andy Boxall/Digital Trends / Google

Read more