Green
bubbles,
rejoice:
your
iPhone-using
friends
are
finally
going
to
have
a
much
better
time
texting
you.
As
part
of
iOS
18,
which
was
released
for
everyone
on
Monday,
Apple
added
support
for
RCS,
the
Rich
Communication
Services
protocol
for
messaging.
This
means
that
chats
between
iPhone
and
Android
users
will
finally
have
a
bunch
of
sorely
needed
features
that
should
have
been
in
place
a
long
time
ago.
A
big
reason
I’ve
stayed
on
iOS
(and
haven’t
even
considered
switching
to
Android)
is
because
iMessage
conversations
work
especially
well
for
my
family
group
chats,
and
I
don’t
want
to
nerf
those
chats.
This
new
RCS
support
is
a
great
step
toward
making
iPhone-to-Android
texts
work
a
lot
better
(though
there
are
still
enough
drawbacks
that
I’m
planning
to
stick
with
iOS).
With
RCS
on
iOS,
you’ll
get
major
improvements
like
high-resolution
media,
typing
indicators,
and
read
receipts
when
you’re
texting
with
people
on
other
phones
that
also
support
RCS.
In
its
iOS
18
press
release,
Apple
also
highlights
support
for
“more
reliable
group
messaging
compared
to
SMS
and
MMS.”
RCS
in
iOS
18
means
photos
you
send
to
your
friends
on
Android
won’t
be
blurry.Screenshot
by
Alex
Cranz
/
The
Verge
RCS
chats
are
still
missing
many
features
Apple
bakes
in
for
iMessage
conversations,
like
being
able
to
schedule
messages
to
send
later
or
add
animated
text
effects
to
what
you
write.
But
with
RCS
support,
a
lot
of
the
basics
are
now
available.
When
you’re
texting
somebody
not
on
an
iPhone,
take
a
look
at
the
text-entry
box.
In
gray
letters,
you’ll
see
the
words
“Text
Message,”
then
a
dot,
and
then
“RCS”
or
“SMS.”
If
you
see
RCS,
you’re
having
an
RCS
chat! You
might
see
similar
“RCS”
or
“SMS”
indicators
in
the
middle
of
a
conversation
thread.
You
can
see
if
you’re
having
an
SMS
or
RCS
chat.Screenshot
by
David
Pierce
/
The
Verge
There
may
be,
however,
at
least
one
catch:
it
seems
that
not
all
carriers
support
RCS
on
iPhone
yet.
While,
according
to
9to5Google,
AT&T,
T-Mobile,
and
Verizon
all
support
the
feature
in
the
US,
I’m
on
Mint
Mobile,
and
instead
of
saying
“RCS,”
my
iPhone-to-Android
conversations
still
say
“SMS.”
At
least
I
have
good-looking
Tapbacks,
which
are
available
on
SMS.
But
on
the
whole,
SMS
conversations
haven’t
changed,
so
if
you’re
forced
to
chat
with
your
Android
friends
over
SMS,
you’ll
have
to
deal
with
the
limitations
that
have
been
in
place
for
years.
If,
for
some
reason,
you
want
to
turn
RCS
off,
you
can
do
that
from
Settings
>
Apps
>
Messages
>
RCS
Messaging.
The
iPhone
settings
for
RCS.Screenshot
by
Alex
Cranz
/
The
Verge
Apple
is
only
supporting
the
basic
RCS
standard,
called
RCS
Universal
Profile,
which
isn’t
encrypted.
That
means
if
you’re
texting
your
friend
who
use
Google
Messages,
those
messages
won’t
be
encrypted
like
they
are
if
you’re
texting
with
another
iPhone
user
over
iMessage.
While
disappointing,
it’s
not
too
surprising.
Apple
would
probably
still
prefer
that
everyone
buy
an
iPhone.
But
let’s
hope
Apple
makes
RCS
texts
encrypted
in
a
future
iOS
release.
(Originally posted by Jay Peters)
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