News

If you use WhatsApp on a Windows laptop or computer, then this news is important for you. Meta has suddenly decided to shut ...
WhatsApp has updated its Windows app. The new version is web-based. It uses Microsoft Edge WebView2. Users must re-link their ...
Meta is planning to drop its native WhatsApp Windows app in favor of a web wrapper version instead, just months after ...
To enable the screen lock feature on WhatsApp Web beta, users need to follow a few simple steps: 1. Update WhatsApp: Make sure you have the latest version of WhatsApp installed on your mobile device.
Meta has replaced WhatsApp’s native Windows 11 app with a Chromium-based beta web wrapper, which supposedly offers fewer ...
Now on the WhatsApp mobile app, simply tap on the Menu and go to WhatsApp Web that will lead you to the QR code reader. Once opened then go on and point the QR code on the desktop screen.
Traditionally, WhatsApp Web has been limited to sending messages and sharing media, leaving voice and video calls exclusive to desktop apps. However, the discovery of this in-development feature ...
WhatsApp Web beta has introduced an anticipated screen lock feature, enhancing user privacy. This functionality, previously in development, has now been made available to a select group of beta ...
WhatsApp said the new feature, called “search the web,” works by allowing users to upload the text message via their browser. This means that WhatsApp itself never sees the content of any ...
Why this new WhatsApp feature matters. In the grand scheme of things this seems like a fairly small feature to add, particularly when we know video and voice calls are coming to WhatsApp Web in ...
The feature is called WhatsApp Web and became available on various platforms including Android and Windows Phone earlier this year, but the feature was absent for iPhone users at the time “due ...
WhatsApp, one of the most popular instant messaging platforms on the planet, is testing a feature that could make it simpler for its 2 billion users to tell whether the assertion made in messages ...