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- retrieve accidentally deleted text messages - Android Community
To retrieve accidentally deleted text messages on your Android device, you have several options: Check the Recycle Bin or Trash folder in your messaging app Some Android phones, like Samsung Galaxy models, have this feature Restore from a Google Drive backup if you have it enabled Go to Settings > System > Backup to locate your backed-up data
- Change Messages notifications settings - Google Messages
Change advanced settings Change how Google Messages sends pictures, videos audio files Send a message or a file separately to each person in a conversation: Tap Group messaging Send an SMS reply to all recipients and get individual replies (mass text) Automatically download files when data roams: Turn on Auto-download MMS when roaming
- Send read text voice messages in Google Messages
You can send and receive text messages with friends and contacts on Google Messages
- Sign in to Google Voice - Computer - Google Voice Help
Sign in to Google Voice to check for new text messages or voicemail, see your call history, send a new message, or update your settings Not sure which Google Account to use?
- How do I implement onchange of lt;input type=text gt; with jQuery?
You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful What's reputation and how do I get it? Instead, you can save this post to reference later
- TINYTEXT, TEXT, MEDIUMTEXT, and LONGTEXT maximum storage sizes
Per the MySQL docs, there are four TEXT types: TINYTEXT TEXT MEDIUMTEXT LONGTEXT What is the maximum length that I can store in a column of each data type assuming the character encoding is UTF-8?
- Difference between text and varchar (character varying)
What's the difference between the text data type and the character varying (varchar) data types? According to the documentation If character varying is used without length specifier, the type ac
- How does `#:~:text=` in URL work to highlight text? - Stack Overflow
56 TL;DR How why are some browsers able to search and highlight text in the HTML body which is followed by #:~:text= in the URL? Explanation One day I was searching for something on Google, which lead me to Quora's result I observed that 2 sentences were highlighted in yellow, which were part of URL after the aforementioned parameter
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