How to text from your computer with Android Messages
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Wednesday, June 20, 2018
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Android
Yesterday Google started rolling out the ability to text from the
web with Android Messages. The feature gives users a lot more flexibility
in choosing how and where they can carry on conversations. As long as your
Android smartphone is powered on, you can text from a desktop computer or even
other mobile devices — including iOS products like an iPad if you just open up
Safari. Aside from text, you can also send emoji, stickers, and images over the
web.
Using Android Messages on the web requires using Android Messages as your
main texting app on your phone. I like it just fine, and Google is clearly
planning big things for the future, but if you prefer, say, Samsung’s default
messages app or something else, the two don’t work together.
With that out of the way, getting started and setting things up is fairly
simple.
- Make
sure you’ve got the latest version of Android Messages installed
on your phone.
- Go
to messages.android.com on the computer or other device
you want to text from. You’ll see a big QR code on the right side of this
page.
- Open up
Android Messages on your smartphone. Tap the icon with three vertical dots
at the top and to the far right. You should see a “Messages for web”
option inside this menu. If you don’t, just give it some time. Google is
rolling out the feature gradually to everyone over the next week.
- Tap “Scan QR code” and point your phone’s camera at the QR code on your other device. In less than a second, your phone will vibrate and the two will be linked up. You should notice your conversations show up in the left column of the browser window. Google says that “conversation threads, contacts, and other settings will be encrypted and cached on your browser.”Note: this doesn’t mean your actual text conversations are encrypted. They’re not.
And that’s it. To make sure you don’t have to repeat the QR process, you
can keep your computer paired with your phone by enabling “Remember this
computer.” That’s in the settings menu, which you can access from the web
version of Android Messages by clicking on the three-dot icon to the right of
“Messages.” You shouldn’t turn this on if you’re using a public PC that other
people can easily access.
Which browsers work with Android Messages on the web?
- Chrome
- Firefox
- Microsoft
Edge
- Safari
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You can remove a computer’s access to your messages from your Android
phone.
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If you want
to revoke a web browser’s access to your conversations and messaging, you can
quickly do so from your Android smartphone. Go back to the “Messages for web”
area of Android Messages and you can choose to sign out of individual computers
or all of them with a click.
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There’s a dark mode!
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Android
Messages doesn’t have a dark theme on mobile, but Google has created one for
the web, where all the app’s whites and light grays might overload your
eyeballs at night. You’ll find “Enable dark theme” in settings (on the web)
right above the “Remember this computer” option mentioned earlier.
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Keep your phone powered on.
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Android
Messages on the web can’t work independently of your smartphone. So if your
battery dies or if your phone shuts off for any reason, you won’t be able to
send any texts from your computer.
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Drag media into the Android Messages conversation to attach and send.
Sending a photo from Android Messages on the web is
dead simple. You can either use the attachments icon — to the right of emoji
and stickers — or just drag and drop media into the conversation window to send
an MMS.

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