Recently, X (formerly known as Twitter) introduced the option to make free audio and video calls for all its users. The feature was previously available to premium subscribers who enjoyed many other ...
As much as modern smartphones are about AI features, camera quality or gaming ability, you can't ignore their primary job as a communications device. And fortunately for Apple fans, the core iPhone ...
X, formerly Twitter, has just opened up its video and audio calling feature to users on all tiers – allowing everyone with an X account to call other users for absolutely free. The extended capability ...
A long-time promise of Elon Musk came to fruition last week. X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, has made audio and video calls available to all users, not just paid subscribers.
Android users can now make audio and video calls via X...if they pay at least $8 per month to Elon Musk. Credit: Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto via Getty Images Finally – a way to make audio calls and ...
An X employee has revealed that the Android app now supports audio and video calls. The addition comes a few months after the iOS app gained call capabilities. X (formerly known as Twitter) launched ...
The social platform X introduced a new feature last year that lets users make and receive audio and video calls, just like apps such as FaceTime and WhatsApp. However, the feature was limited to ...
WhatsApp is set to introduce a noise cancellation feature for voice and video calls. Currently under development, this ...
The X audio and video call feature which was limited to Premium subscribers only is now expanding to all users of the platform, and yes, that includes the Basic or non-Premium accounts. Even without ...
The feature is turned on automatically for all users, who must go to their settings to manually turn it off. Reading time 2 minutes X owner Elon Musk is dreaming of a world where people ditch their ...
You’re in the middle of a video conference, everyone is waiting, but your microphone isn’t working? Or you can be heard, but all the other participants remain mute? Welcome to the club of Windows ...