Snapchat debuts self-destructing video and instant messages

May 2, 2014 | Mobile, Social media, WhatsApp

ShapChat has expanded from pictures into video and text messaging- taking on the likes of WhatsApp, Vine, Instagram and WeChat. The new features, collectively called Chat, let users swipe the name of one of their friends in their Snapchat contact list to start a text conversation. Instant messages can be saved individually by tapping on […]

ShapChat has expanded from pictures into video and text messaging- taking on the likes of WhatsApp, Vine, Instagram and WeChat.


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The new features, collectively called Chat, let users swipe the name of one of their friends in their Snapchat contact list to start a text conversation.
Instant messages can be saved individually by tapping on them while users can also take a screenshot of conversations to save them, Snapchat said in a blog post on Thursday.
Messages that are not saved will be cleared after users read them.
Snapchat has also added video chat to its features. The app will show when a friend is online, allowing users to start live video chats with the press of a button, much like Apple does with FaceTime, the company Snapchat showed in a video.
Until now, Snapchat mainly let users share pictures, which disappear after they’re viewed. “But until today, we felt that Snapchat was missing an important part of conversation: presence.
There’s nothing like knowing you have the full attention of your friend while you’re chatting,” Snapchat said.
The new service will be available for Android and iOS.
Snapchat did not report how many people use its service but last October said that “about 350 million Snaps” are sent every day.
Snapchat is not the first photo messaging app to introduce video and messaging. Instagram, for instance, introduced Instagram Direct about four months ago, allowing its users to share photos and videos privately or with a select group of people. Twitter’s video-sharing app Vine also introduceda private messaging system recently.
There are also a wide variety of mobile messaging apps available, chief among them WhatsApp, which has about 450 million users and is in the process of being acquired by Facebook for $19 billion. WhatsApp also lets its users share recorded videos and photos.
Facebook Messenger, the company’s chat app, made it easier to add selfies and video to conversations earlier this week. Snapchat rejected a $3bn offer for Facebook late last year.
Vine also added the option to send direct messages recently, and Twitter is pursuing the possibility of secret conversations.

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