WhatsApp Now Has a Desktop App, Available on Windows, OS X
WhatsApp is now also available as a native desktop app on Windows and OS X, the Facebook-owned instant messaging and voice calling company announced. The app supports desktop notifications, keyboard shortcuts and a range of other features. For the desktop app to function, users still need to have their phone connected to the Internet.
WhatsApp isn't very popular in the United States and European countries, but it has a large user base of active users in the emerging markets such as India and Brazil. In fact, earlier this year, the company announced that it has hit one billion monthly active users. For those interested, you can download the app for your desktop (or any other device) from the company's website.
WhatsApp isn't very popular in the United States and European countries, but it has a large user base of active users in the emerging markets such as India and Brazil. In fact, earlier this year, the company announced that it has hit one billion monthly active users. For those interested, you can download the app for your desktop (or any other device) from the company's website.
I prefer email on Linux, but I nevertheless appreciate the effort.
When I was in Spain, everyone used WhatsAPP and I just found the whole thing poorly designed.
As a cheap SMS replacement it's good, but it's really not much more than that. Notifications don't follow you on whatever device you are using and it really does not take phone number changes very well. All the people who had me in Spain? Now that I am back in Canada, If they try and WhatsAPP me, they will get no notification that I will never see the message.
So what's the point of a desktop program if it requires a smartphone?
Telegram has had desktop apps (including Linux) for a while now, including the obligatory web front end which I find invaluable at work. It says Whatsapp isn't popular in Europe? I don't know about the mainland but everyone I know in the UK uses Whatsapp, technical and non-technical alike. Telegram is slowly being pushed onto my friends, but critical mass is a hard thing to break.
Whatsapp is just a modified implementation of the XMPP (Jabber) standard. I will stick with standard XMPP and choose from the dozens of applications that support it. Thanks.
"WhatsApp isn't very popular in the United States and E"uropean countries"
You're kidding right? Over half my contacts are on WhatsApp - it's basically free texting, including internationally.
Anyone, especially who travels in Europe, who isn't using it already is just one friend away from being invited to it.
More people I know use WhatsApp than Facetime, or Skype.
Austria, also. I don't really understand where this comes from, as whatsapp has killed traditional SMS around here.
Add Italy to the list --- virtually everyone under the age of 50 uses it. Though I don't know anymore if Italy counts as "Europe" or "developing countries" nowadays. :)
My first program:
Hell Segmentation fault