• Legend5V@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    The person who though up of blue and green bubble differentiation should be chief of marketing

    • lisaroo3@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Apple had blue bubbles before Android was out the door, and Google thought they’d make their own mark by using green. The rest is history.

    • __theoneandonly@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Before iMessage, all text bubbles were green. For the original concept of iPhone, anything telephonic (that your carrier could charge you for, since Steve Jobs ensured that iPhones got unlimited data at first) was colored green. That’s why, to this day, the phone app and the messages app are both green, as well as the “you’re on a call” status that appears behind the clock.

      Then iMessage came out in iOS 5 and they made it blue, the color of things that used data (like safari, stocks, mail, App Store, weather)

      It wasn’t until the redesign of iOS 7 that they cranked up the saturation of all the colors, and the telephony green became like, anxiety-inducing electric green. I feel like that’s when people started hating these green bubbles so much, because iOS 7 actually made them an ugly, radioactive color. Where the blue remained a pleasant, calm ocean blue.

      • Stellar_Duck@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        Wait I just looked in my messages and my messages are blue but any inbound ones are grey? That’s both messages I know to be SMS and in iMessage group chats (the one I had).

    • danielbauer1375@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      I actually kind of prefer the aesthetic of the green bubbles, despite being conditioned to look at it unfavorable.