Telegram's 12th update for the year is out - Adds reactions, hidden text and more
You can also translate messages
The thing about the instant messaging platform Telegram is that it is always on the ball when it comes to rolling out updates. As 2021 winds to a close, they have come out with the 12th update for the year and the second in December. Now users can add iMessage-style reactions, translate messages, get themed QR codes and even have an option to hide texts such as spoilers.
This update is Telegram 8.4, and is being rolled out to all Android users. With each new update, Telegram seems to take a new leap. The previous one significantly improved user privacy, both for individual and group chats.
- Telegram has become a playground for cybercriminals
- This popular Telegram privacy feature is practically useless for some users
iMessage-style reactions now on Telegram
Telegram, it may be recalled, was the first messaging app to add animated and interactive emojis. Now, six of these emojis --- thumbs up, thumbs down, heart, fire, party, and star-eyes --- are being made available as reactions to share feelings and feedback – without sending any messages. Basically, Telegram would now allow users to send reactions that attach to specific messages instead of sending as their own messages.
This is a feature that Android systems are still to crack with conviction. It is popular on iMessage, and on platforms like Slack.
To send a quick reaction, users need to simply double-tap a message. Users can also change their default reaction to another emoji in Settings.
"While Reactions are available in private chats, in groups and channels, the admins decide whether to turn on reactions and choose which reaction emoji are available in the chat," Telegram said.
How to hide text and kill spoilers on Telegram
Another interesting update is the one to hide particular part of a message in the chat, as well as in the chat list and notifications.
Get daily insight, inspiration and deals in your inbox
Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more.
This hidden text update to help mask spoilers. So if you want to hold forth about say about Minnal Murali and his epic fight with the antagonist Shibu but others in the group have still not caught the film, all you need to do is select any part of your text when typing and choose the new 'Spoiler' formatting. When others in the group are ready to read it, they just need to tap the spoiler text to read it.
One more interesting new feature that is available for Telegram users now is they can translate any message into another language, right within the app. Users can enable Translation in Settings > Language and a dedicated Translate button will be added to the context menu when selecting a message. The list of available languages for translation depends on your phone's operating system. Users can also exclude any language they speak fluently – which will hide the translate button for those messages.
The latest update also adds the ability to generate QR codes for any user that have a public username. Tap the new QR code icon next to the username of a person (or from a chat's info page), choose the colors and the pattern of your choice, then print, post or share the QR code to other apps.
Telegram has also redesigned all the context menus for macOS with new shortcut hints and animated icons for every single menu item in the app.
Check out our yearend stories around Tech, OTT, Fintech and Movies:
- Tata Nano EV – the perfect family vehicle in 2022?
- Smartphone Gaming - what prompted it and where it is headed in 2022
- Tech headlines of 2021 - events that made us sit up and take note
- Our Choice of 2021: Indian OTT films that impressed us, and didn't
- Sequels for these 10 popular web series on OTT could arrive in 2022
- South Indian films of 2021 that you can't afford to miss on OTT platforms
- A bumper year for Indian fintechs in 2021 - Good times to last
Want to know about the latest happenings in tech? Follow TechRadar India on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram!
Over three decades as a journalist covering current affairs, politics, sports and now technology. Former Editor of News Today, writer of humour columns across publications and a hardcore cricket and cinema enthusiast. He writes about technology trends and suggest movies and shows to watch on OTT platforms.