Close Menu
InclusiFund
    What's Hot

    BitMine’s Tom Lee Joins Eightco Board as ORBS Stock Jumps on $125 Million Fundraise

    March 12, 2026

    The retention problem hiding in plain sight for African startups​

    March 12, 2026

    What The CSS corner-shape Property Unlocks For Everyday UI — Smashing Magazine

    March 12, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    InclusiFund
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Daily Brief
    • Dealflow Dashboard
    • Sectors
      • Agritech
      • Climate Tech
      • Fintech
      • Healthtech
      • Logistics
      • Mobility
      • SaaS / Enterprise
    • Tools
    • Reports
    • Opinion
    • Services
      • For Investors
      • For Founders
    • About Us
    • More
      • Disclaimer
      • Advertise With Us
      • Newsletter
      • Work With Us
      • Terms and Conditions
      • Privacy Policy
      • Contact Us
      • About Us
    InclusiFund
    Home»Tools»You’re not using your Samsung Messages to its full potential—here’s what you’re missing
    Tools

    You’re not using your Samsung Messages to its full potential—here’s what you’re missing

    ElanBy ElanFebruary 2, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    You’re not using your Samsung Messages to its full potential—here’s what you’re missing
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    Samsung Messages seems like any other texting app at first. Simple and even a little boring. But the app has a whole lot of features that can make reading, replying, and managing your text messages way more convenient. And no, I’m not talking about simply bookmarking messages or digging things out of the Trash folder.

    There’s so much more than that. From a simple pinch gesture that lets you modify the text size to quick responses that save time, and conversation categories that bring order to inbox chaos. Once you start using these features, Samsung Messages feels anything but boring.

    Pinch to adjust the font size

    Customize your chats for comfort

    Samsung Messages app zoom level
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required
    Samsung Messages app pinch to zoom in
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required
    Samsung Messages app pinch to zoom
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required

    Like most phones, Samsung Galaxy devices let you change the system-wide font size, which makes the text appear bigger or smaller. That works fine, but you don’t have to alter the font size just to make text inside Samsung Messages easier on the eyes.

    Open any conversation and simply pinch in or out on the screen. It works much like zooming in on a photo. Once you set a zoom level, it’s applied to all your chats. My only complaint, though, is that this works only inside a chat and not on the main inbox.

    Remove location from shared images

    Protect your privacy

    Samsung Messages app menu
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required
    Samsung Messages app settings menu
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required
    Samsung Messages settings menu
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required

    Every photo you capture on your Samsung phone carries more details than what you just see on the screen. This extra data is known as metadata, and it includes the exact GPS location of where the photo was captured. Of course, this is not a problem when you’re sharing photos to your friends and family. But this GPS data is also unnecessary and can pose a privacy risk.

    While it’s possible to remove this metadata from photos manually before sharing, Samsung Messages makes it much easier. In Samsung Messages, head to Settings > More settings and turn on Remove location from shared images. Once that’s on, any photo you send through the app automatically leaves out location details.

    Stop checking every notification blindly

    Samsung Messages chat
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required
    Samsung Messages chat options
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required
    Samsung Messages custom sound
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required

    Not every message you receive is going to be important. A text from family or your partner usually matters far more than that random promotional message from a local store. But when your phone plays the same notification sound for every text, there’s no way to tell who it’s from without actually picking up the phone.

    A clever way to fix this is by customizing notification sounds for your favorite contacts. That way, you can tell if a message is worth stopping to check. Hear that specific tone and you know it’s someone important. Hear the default sound, and it can probably wait. This even works when you’re wearing headphones.

    I find this extremely underrated because it stops me from picking up my phone unnecessarily while working. For that same reason, I’ve also set up different notification sounds for different apps, so my phone gives me context before I even look at the screen.

    Conversations in Google Messages on a Galaxy Z Fold 5.


    Your group chats might be terrible without you even realizing it

    An easy-to-miss upgrade can silently downgrade your chats.

    Use conversation categories and auto-delete older messages

    Manage inbox chaos

    Besides personal chats, your inbox is probably flooded with one-time codes, delivery updates, promotional texts, and more. The real problem with this overload is not the messages themselves, but how hard it becomes to find the conversations that actually matter. Sure, you can always pin your favorite chats, but that only helps so much.

    Samsung Messages solves this with a handy feature called conversations categories. It lets you create tabs for different types of messages. This means you can keep your personal messages in one place, work conversations in another, and shove all those bank alerts and promos into their own category.

    Setting it up is simple. Tap the three-dot icon and choose Edit categories, then move your chats where they belong. Once you do this, you’ll see your messages in relevant folders instead of one endless list.

    To keep things tidy, there’s also auto-delete for older messages. You can enable it by heading to Settings > More settings > Auto-delete older messages. Once you do, Samsung Messages automatically deletes older texts once your inbox reaches 1000 texts.

    Use quick responses to save time

    Speed up your chats

    Samsung Messages quick responses
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required
    Samsung Messages add new response
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required
    Samsung Messages chat
    Screenshot by Pankil Shah — No attribution required

    You may already be using quick responses on your phone when you can’t pick up a call, but the same idea works for text messages too. What’s even better is that you aren’t limited to those default “What’s up?” or “When can we meet?” responses.

    You can add your own responses based on what you actually say every day. For example, I use quick responses for phrases like “On my way” and “Are you free right now?”

    To set this up, head to Settings > More settings > Quick responses. Here, tap the plus icon at the top and start adding your custom phrases. Finally, turn on the Show in conversation option. Once done, your saved responses appear right inside your chats.


    None of these features are strictly necessary, but these small conveniences do start to add up. In fact, some of these features are the reason I prefer Samsung Messages over Google Messages.

    FULL Messages missing potentialheres Samsung Youre
    Elan
    • Website

    Related Posts

    What The CSS corner-shape Property Unlocks For Everyday UI — Smashing Magazine

    March 12, 2026

    This smart TV brand crossed a big line with its absurd ad antics

    March 11, 2026

    iOS 26.4: AI Playlists in Apple Music and More Updates Coming to Your iPhone

    March 10, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Economy News
    Crypto

    BitMine’s Tom Lee Joins Eightco Board as ORBS Stock Jumps on $125 Million Fundraise

    By ElanMarch 12, 20260

    In brief Eightco shares are rising after the firm announced a new $125 million fundraise…

    The retention problem hiding in plain sight for African startups​

    March 12, 2026

    What The CSS corner-shape Property Unlocks For Everyday UI — Smashing Magazine

    March 12, 2026
    Top Trending
    Crypto

    BitMine’s Tom Lee Joins Eightco Board as ORBS Stock Jumps on $125 Million Fundraise

    By ElanMarch 12, 20260

    In brief Eightco shares are rising after the firm announced a new…

    Tech

    The retention problem hiding in plain sight for African startups​

    By ElanMarch 12, 20260

    In much of Africa’s startup ecosystem, user growth is still treated as…

    Tools

    What The CSS corner-shape Property Unlocks For Everyday UI — Smashing Magazine

    By ElanMarch 12, 20260

    For years, developers have been hacking around the limitations of border-radius, using…

    Your source for comprehensive insights on Africa’s private credit markets, InclusiFund synthesizes deal pipelines, repayment patterns, collateral trends, and sector-level signals to guide investors in underwriting and structuring credit in emerging African markets.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    our Categories
    • Work With Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Work With Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2025 Inclusifund. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.