Use Android Messages for the Web to Send Texts from Your Computer | Tech News

Google released its new “Messages on the Web” that allows you to send and receive texts from your PC, Chromebook, or Mac without digging out your phone.

If you’ve wanted to send a text to someone from your computer instead of digging out your phone, you’re in luck. Google recently announced the rollout of its Messages for the Web feature for the Android Messages app. It’s a browser-based service that allows you to send and receive both SMS and RCS (Rich Communication Services) messages from your PC, Mac, Chromebook, and other devices with a web browser. Here’s a look at how to set it up and what you can expect from Google’s new messaging feature.

Android Messages for the Web

Launch the Messages app on your phone and tap the options button in the upper-right corner of the screen and then choose “Messages for the web” from the menu. That will bring up another screen with a scanning button. Since this new feature just started rolling out last week, it might not be an option on your phone yet, but you should see it soon.

Android Messages App Scan QR Code

Next, head to messages.android.com on your PC and scan the displayed QR Code with the Messages app on your phone. If you don’t want to go through the linking process every time, toggle on the “Remember this computer” switch before scanning the code.

That’s all there is to it. Now you will be able to start texting away from your browser. The experience is clean, intuitive, and simple to use. There is a list of conversation on the left and currently selected chat on the right. You can send texts, images, stickers, and the most important – emojis. You can see all of your past messages and start creating new ones and will be able to receive desktop notifications on the web. All the major browsers like Firefox, Chrome, Safari, and Microsoft Edge are supported.

Android Messages on the Web

A few other things to point out here. It syncs your messages fast between your phone and the web. If you delete or create a message on one source it shows up on the other in near real-time. There is also Dark Mode (shown above) that you can turn on via Settings. And if you forget to log out of the Messages app on a computer, you can log out remotely from your phone.

While you can share certain files with a simple drag and drop, right now, PDF and Microsoft Office docs are not supported. Still, this is a great start for cross-platform Android messaging. It has been a top requested feature for years, and is off to a solid start and should only improve moving forward.

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