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HOW DO YOU DELETE MESSAGES ON SNAPCHAT?
To delete snapchat saved messages that won’t go away you have to delete all the cached and history from the server. For this snapchat had not provided special setting but you can do these action by using some third party apps which allows you to delete messages along with the cached and saved traces of data as well.
Click Here : Delete Sn@pchat Saved Messages Click Here : Delete Sn@pchat Saved Messages
Snapchat combines the best of social networks, magazines, and television in a redesign of its omni-entertainment app.
You’ll now see image and headline previews of the content inside Discover channels and Live stories on the Stories page, instead of just logos for the publishers or events they capture. The Discover page now features a Pinterest-style mason grid of tiles, while the Stories page now combines the two rows of static Discover channels and Live Stories into one scrollable row of non-friend content.
Click Here : Delete Sn@pchat Saved Messages Click Here : Delete Sn@pchat Saved Messages
Snapchat’s Stories page, with the old version on the left and the new version on the right
Also, instead of having to dig your favorite Discover channels out of the whole list, you can now tap-and-hold to subscribe to them so they always appear amongst the Recent Stories from accounts you’ve added, unless you later unsubscribe. This gives publishers like Tastemade and IGN an extra call to action to bake into their Discover channels and marketing.
The goal here is to make professionally-made and community-curated content just as attractive as what friends share on the app. Previously, Discover channels felt bolted on to the experience, and can seem overly polished compared to Stories from friends that are fascinating despite flaws. VentureBeat and Recode previously reported that changes to the Discover page were coming.
Tapping-and-holding on a Discover channel lets you Subscribe so you always see it on your Stories page
The Discover redesign should make building the channels more lucrative for publishers. Without any dynamic previews, the channel buttons looked the same every day and weren’t very enticing. That might have reduced the potential viewership for the channels that cost brands a lot to both produce and rent the space from Snapchat.
But with eye-catching peeks at what’s inside, users might be more willing to click-through and watch the combination of videos, text articles, images, and ads featured within Discover channels.
Snapchat’s Discover page, with the old version on the left and the new version on the right
Since Snapchat splits the ad revenue from inside Discover channels with their publishers, it stands to earn money from driving them more viewership. But if it’s not careful, it could overrun user generated content with top-down Discover channels, making the app feel more like a billboard than a community.
Snapchat combines the best of social networks, magazines, and television in a redesign of its omni-entertainment app.
You’ll now see image and headline previews of the content inside Discover channels and Live stories on the Stories page, instead of just logos for the publishers or events they capture. The Discover page now features a Pinterest-style mason grid of tiles, while the Stories page now combines the two rows of static Discover channels and Live Stories into one scrollable row of non-friend content.
Snapchat’s Stories page, with the old version on the left and the new version on the right
Also, instead of having to dig your favorite Discover channels out of the whole list, you can now tap-and-hold to subscribe to them so they always appear amongst the Recent Stories from accounts you’ve added, unless you later unsubscribe. This gives publishers like Tastemade and IGN an extra call to action to bake into their Discover channels and marketing.
The goal here is to make professionally-made and community-curated content just as attractive as what friends share on the app. Previously, Discover channels felt bolted on to the experience, and can seem overly polished compared to Stories from friends that are fascinating despite flaws. VentureBeat and Recode previously reported that changes to the Discover page were coming.
Tapping-and-holding on a Discover channel lets you Subscribe so you always see it on your Stories page
The Discover redesign should make building the channels more lucrative for publishers. Without any dynamic previews, the channel buttons looked the same every day and weren’t very enticing. That might have reduced the potential viewership for the channels that cost brands a lot to both produce and rent the space from Snapchat.
But with eye-catching peeks at what’s inside, users might be more willing to click-through and watch the combination of videos, text articles, images, and ads featured within Discover channels.
Snapchat’s Discover page, with the old version on the left and the new version on the right
Since Snapchat splits the ad revenue from inside Discover channels with their publishers, it stands to earn money from driving them more viewership. But if it’s not careful, it could overrun user generated content with top-down Discover channels, making the app feel more like a billboard than a community.
napchat is shifting from a social network limited to content shared by people you follow to an ephemeral, real-time database of what’s going on now everywhere. Today Snapchat launchedSearch for Stories submitted to its public Our Stories. It makes Snapchat as deep as whatever the world is sharing, creating near-infinite rabbit holes to go down, and a stronger competitor for YouTube and Twitter.
That aligns exactly with Snap IPO strategy following the slow-down of user growthafter the removal of auto-advance and the launch of Instagram Stories and Facebook’s other competing clones: Snapchat wants to be where some people spend tons of engagement time, rather than where everyone spends a little time.
It also sees Snapchat break one of its cardinal rules. User-generated content is no longer limited to a lifespan of 24 hours. A Snapchat spokesperson confirms to TechCrunch that some Snaps submitted to Our Stories that appear in the new Search feature will be visible for less than a day to up to a few weeks or even months.
If content around a theme is being submitted more rapidly, what’s seen in Search results will turn over more quickly, while themes that only get submissions every few days may see Snaps stay visible for longer to make sure there’s something to watch for the theme.
How Snapchat Stories Search works
In January, Snapchat opened the ability to submit to Our Story from people in certain locations, like big events, or at certain times, like Christmas, to everyone everywhere all the time. But this meant it was pulling in way more content than its human curators could package into specific, widely visible Our Stories like ones for the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade or the NBA Finals.
Now, Snapchat is using algorithms to scan the caption text, time and visual elements found in Snaps submitted to Our Story and group them by theme. For example, it could pull out Snaps with the words “dog” or “puppy” in captions, or use machine vision to detect the shape of a real dog in the photos or videos, and aggregate them into an Our Story that comes up when people search for “Puppies.” Snap notes you could use this to watch a nearby basketball game, see what’s happening at a local bar, check out a specific Fashion Week runway show or explore a vacation spot. More than 1 million themes will have Search results available.
Snap says it will keep expanding the ways it categorizes submissions. Perhaps that could eventually include what background music is playing or what voices are saying.
The rollout of the feature begins with people in select U.S. cities being able to search for public Our Stories, but everyone’s submissions are already being indexed. For now, no ads, sponsored lenses or sponsored geofilters will appear in the Search collections. That makes this a play for more engagement, not a new channel to drive more ad views.
Snaps submitted to Our Story can appear in Search results for up to months, rather than disappearing after 24 hours like usual
Why Search makes Snapchat endless
Previously, you could think of Snapchat like a television with the Stories of people you follow as different cable channels. Discover and Snapchat Shows were like HBO, offering extra premium content. All you could watch was what these channels aired. If you flipped through all the channels and still weren’t satisfied, you were out of luck.
Search is like having the world’s biggest Blockbuster video rental spot open up next door. Suddenly you can browse a near-endless array of content in all sorts of categories, from popular mainstream releases to weird niche foreign films. New films arrive faster than you can watch them, so there’s always something you haven’t seen available.
For the biggest Snapchat fans, this uncaps their potential engagement time. You can now do around-the-clock movie marathons.
Another analogy is to think of Search as turning Snapchat into the ephemeral, real-time YouTubebuilt for mobile video creation. YouTube indexes the world’s online recorded video content with Google’s search prowess. But often there’s a delay of a few hours to days from when something is recorded to when people upload it. And since YouTube was originally built for the web, the clips are typically longer, from 30 seconds to a few minutes.
That norm subtly discourages short-form, mobile-shot, real-time, off-the-cuff content. And that leaves the door open for Snapchat and its new search feature. Instead of just relying on text descriptions and manually added tags, Snapchat is using machine vision to see what’s actually in content, then categorize and index it. Since it’s all mobile and people submit to Our Story as soon as they’ve shot something, plus it’s curated mostly by algorithms, content should be more quickly searchable.
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