dadoya
New member
Just got my update....im ompressed hpw quickly they fixed it....works fine and few new things that they added, works nice...
My whatsapp icon lost its color on homescreen. Color still there when in the alphabetical list. Pinning/unpinning does not fix this.
So what can we as the customers do? I will report my concerns about the battery to Microsoft via the Store page (you know, the button below the App description). If you guys wanna do something, join me in doing so. I guess the guys at Microsoft will notice the problem, if we all report it.
Does the message preview on the large tile work for all of you? It doesn't seem to work for me, including multiple repins to the home screen. The count on the tile and the lock screen, as well as the notification work perfectly.
2.9.2 went fine.
2.9.3 has killed my phone.
Installed and uninstalled three times. Each time I install, my phone starts to lock up. Get black screens, wont respond.
Delete whatsapp and it goes away. Now I cannot use it. Ugh.
that's not a bug, its a feature. I prefer it that way. It now looks like a native OS app
I prefer apps with different colors, makes navigating the screen much easier.
You know I've noticed another interesting behaviour of this app; or maybe all data using apps? If you turn off the internet on your phone completely (you go out or something) and then when you come back within WiFi and connect, apps like Whatsapp or IM+ do not come back online. You have to actually open them for them to 'realise' that the phone now has internet connectivity.Somewhere on this forum or XDA lies an email correspondence with Whatsapp support in 2012, when they confirmed it will stream at regular points and ping back only in small KBs as good as you receiving a text on Whatsapp every so often. This way it keeps connection to Whatsapp notifications regular. Apparently that was the only way back in WP7.5 days that Whatsapp figured they can deliver reliable notifications. The WiFi-on isn't just for keeping WiFi on to deliver messages for guys who don't use mobile data, but also to keep reliable delivery. All they really need is invest in their servers. I don't blame them much as these guys have gained overwhelming popularity in just 4 years since the inception of Whatsapp on iOS. They were/are under prepared.