

If your friend is able to receive iMessages simply type your message in the field marked iMessage.It depends on whether your contact details are set up on their phone.) (Note that an iMessage sent this way may arrive on your friend’s phone with your Apple ID email address as the identifier rather than your phone number. This means they will receive your text as an iMessage, sent via Apple’s servers. If your friend has an iPhone you can tell because their number will gain a blue box.
Send text from macbook pro mac#


This option is useful if you don’t want to capture everything you happen to see on screen in the image you share, it lets you set a time (10-seconds) during which you can click on the application you want to capture an image of, type Command + Option + Hto hide all the other open apps you have on your Mac, and the image will be taken. The image is subsequently created when you let go. Just pop your cursor to the top left of the area you want to capture, click and drag to create a red square that shows you what you’ve selected. Tap this option and you’ll be told that the Mac will capture an image of an area you select on screen. I’d like it to be able to source images from Photos and the Desktop, for example). (The implementation seems a little limited. This is a neat way to share a scanned invoice if you’re using Business Chat to speak to customer support, for example. Use this option to import an image from a connected camera or scanner. A quick explanation of what they do: Import Image: It’s possible you’ve come across this before, but may have missed the lower three items, which let you Import Image, Capture Selection from Screen, or Capture Screen Using Timer. That’s useful, but if you want to share something with someone you are chatting with on a Mac you don’t need to exit the chat to get the shot, you can just use Message’s built-in shortcut: Control-Click anywhere in the message input field and you’ll see this contextual menu appear:
