Blackberry sued Facebook for patent infringement, saying the social network's messaging apps infringed on the former phone maker's intellectual property related to such innovations as
showing an unread message indicator on top of an icon and showing multiple incoming messages in an inbox.
Not exact matches
As
shown in the image, this example has 4
unread messages.
If you are viewing the «inbox» and you receive a new
message this will automatically
show the
unread conversation at the top of the inbox in «bold» (indicating
unread) and will update even if you don't reload the page.
The yellow circle next to the chat
shows how many
unread messages you have with that particular user
Some of these features include unlimited emails,
message status indicators
showing if your sent
message has been read,
unread or deleted and your profile will be highlighted in all the search results pages.
If you dismiss the BBM
message, it will continue to
show as delivered but
unread to your contact.
This will prevent your email system from
showing you an alarming count of supposedly new,
unread messages for each folder.
The external default screen
shows the battery status, alarm status, number of
unread messages, signal type and strength, and an analog clock with the date.
If you have the Badge App Icon setting enabled, it means that if an app wants to alert you to
unread e-mails or
messages, it will typically
show an
unread counter (badge) on its app icon, as seen here with Hangouts.
The flat icons like mail, phone,
messages, and email lack the useful feature of
showing how many calls or
messages you missed, or
unread emails.
For example: Gmail Notifications include a richer preview of
unread messages, Google + notifications can
show photos within the notification tray etc..
Your phone's status bar can
show you how much battery you've got left or how strong your signal is, but what if you want to be able to see how much memory your phone has left, how many
unread messages you have, the battery temperature or your CPU usage?
For example, the Outlook tile will
show you how many
unread messages you have, as well as a snippet of your most recent email.
You can easily imagine other full - screen apps making similarly good use of the top corners of a modern phone's display: games can
show the player's score on one side and remaining lives on the other, reading apps can display page numbers or quick links to bookmarks, drawing apps can tuck brush shape and size toggles into the corners, and social apps can jam their
unread -
message counters into those slots.
With the prior to versions of Windows 10, my new and
unread mail
messages occasionally
showed up there, but more often didn't.
Also sometimes
Messages show the one we send as an
unread message.
If you enable it, you'll get a count of
unread messages in the tab as
shown below.
The
message notification has also changed as it will be
showing multiple
messages in the same conversation instead of just limiting to the
unread messages.
These replace the standard notification badges that
show up on the right side of each app icon and provide you with the number of missed calls,
unread messages on different apps, and more.
The Facebook Site Information may include, without limitation, the following information, to the extent visible on the Facebook Site: your name, your profile picture, your gender, your birthday, your hometown location (city / state / country), your current location (city / state / country), your political views, your activities, your interests, your musical preferences, television
shows in which you are interested, movies in which you are interested, books in which you are interested, your favorite quotes, the text of your «About Me» section, your relationship status, your dating interests, your relationship interests, your summer plans, your Facebook user network affiliations, your education history, your work history, your course information, copies of photos in your Facebook Site photo albums, metadata associated with your Facebook Site photo albums (e.g., time of upload, album name, comments on your photos, etc.), the total number of
messages sent and / or received by you, the total number of
unread messages in your Facebook inbox, the total number of «pokes» you have sent and / or received, the total number of wall posts on your Wall, a list of user IDs mapped to your Facebook friends, your social timeline, and events associated with your Facebook profile.