So many SMS messages, so little time to delete them
#3
Posted 06 October 2008 - 01:30 PM
You have a counter?
I wish they would fix .mac/MM. there is no counter, or sort.
Maybe Mr. Steve could swoon over the paying customers using MM?
http://homepage.mac....otoAlbum16.html
I wish they would fix .mac/MM. there is no counter, or sort.
Maybe Mr. Steve could swoon over the paying customers using MM?
http://homepage.mac....otoAlbum16.html
#5
Posted 06 October 2008 - 02:13 PM
You can delete an entire conversation, but system messages from a network usually come with a unique identifier so it's actually individual conversations. So each time the system notifies you it's a new IM conversation. I get these all the time too and it's a real pain. I would love a 'delete all' option.
#6
Posted 06 October 2008 - 02:27 PM
While we wait for Apple to include this, I got a better idea for you... find the programmer who wrote the monitoring code and have him remove your 185 text messages himself. Then tell him to fix his code so that kind of crap doesn't happen again. Sounds like a monitoring system that cries wolf too often without doing a proper sanity check first.
#9
Posted 06 October 2008 - 03:55 PM
bq. As you know, deleting a text message on an iPhone is a two step process on an iPhone: 1. Swipe the offending message with your finger. 2. Hit the delete button that appears.
I must be missing something because I can't swipe delete even a single text message on my iPhone -- only the entire conversation. Has the author tried what he's suggesting on his iPhone? Or is he using some secret beta firmware that he wasn't supposed to disclose?
I must be missing something because I can't swipe delete even a single text message on my iPhone -- only the entire conversation. Has the author tried what he's suggesting on his iPhone? Or is he using some secret beta firmware that he wasn't supposed to disclose?
#10
Posted 06 October 2008 - 07:17 PM
I'm in the same position when I have servers go down. It's horrible.
I don't know if it helps, but I did notice one thing that helps. If you forward these to the @mobile.att.net address, they all come in as separate SMS messages. But if you send to @mobile.mycingular.com then they all come in under the same sending address.
That has worked for most people I worked with on it. (Even if they didn't have Cingular previous to AT&T)
I don't know if it helps, but I did notice one thing that helps. If you forward these to the @mobile.att.net address, they all come in as separate SMS messages. But if you send to @mobile.mycingular.com then they all come in under the same sending address.
That has worked for most people I worked with on it. (Even if they didn't have Cingular previous to AT&T)
#11
Posted 06 October 2008 - 07:45 PM
I can do this in iPhone standard SMS app:
1. At the SMS correspondent list, tap the Edit button on the top left corner.
2. A round delete button will appear on the left for every corespondent. Tap on the one that you want to delete all messages from.
3. Tap confirm Delete button.
All messages for that correspondent is deleted.
1. At the SMS correspondent list, tap the Edit button on the top left corner.
2. A round delete button will appear on the left for every corespondent. Tap on the one that you want to delete all messages from.
3. Tap confirm Delete button.
All messages for that correspondent is deleted.
#13
Posted 07 October 2008 - 05:05 AM
This is an excellent tip! I just tried it, and it is true.
(Although I tested that messages to @mobile.mycingular.net
each come from a unique source, while messages to
@mobile.mycingular.com all come from a single source,
and are thereby considered one "conversation" that can be
deleted or cleared in one action.)
So much more convenient, and sort of avoids the problem.
For those commenters saying to just "delete the entire
conversation", don't forget the author is saying that each
message appears to come from a different "person",
and so are not part of a single conversation.
This tip, however, does make those 100s of messages indeed part of
a single conversation.
(Although I tested that messages to @mobile.mycingular.net
each come from a unique source, while messages to
@mobile.mycingular.com all come from a single source,
and are thereby considered one "conversation" that can be
deleted or cleared in one action.)
So much more convenient, and sort of avoids the problem.
For those commenters saying to just "delete the entire
conversation", don't forget the author is saying that each
message appears to come from a different "person",
and so are not part of a single conversation.
This tip, however, does make those 100s of messages indeed part of
a single conversation.



Sign In
Register
Help

MultiQuote