

Interestingly, Xbox's Chat Bubbles work alongside Facebook's Chat Heads feature. After you respond, you can press the Xbox button to see all of your messages, or you can press again on the bubble to close it and drag it to the bottom to permanently remove it. Pressing on the bubble will then open the message which was sent to you. As you drag the bubble, it will follow you and stay on top of whatever app you have open, in our case the Twitter app. You can drag the chat bubble to any side of the screen along the top, bottom, or left and right, but you can't drag it to the center, presumably so you won't cover up app icons. The feature is on by default in the Xbox App, as when you're signed into the Xbox app, and you receive a message from your friend, a small notification bubble with the person's gamer pic or Xbox live avatar will pop up from the side of your screen. On the surface, the feature is very similar in functionality to Facebook's Chat head functionality for Messenger. The "Chat Bubbles" feature was first noted by Major Nelson in the announcement post for a recent Xbox System update. Here is a hands on look at the experience, and what you can expect once you have updated.

#Skype chat bubbles update
Well, the company recently rolled out an update for the Xbox App on Android, bringing a "Chat Bubbles" functionality that allows you to use your mobile games and apps while keeping your Xbox conversations within reach.
#Skype chat bubbles windows
We've seen the company roll out a " My People" feature for Windows Insiders which allows them to pin people to the taskbar, and view multiple communication apps together as one. Microsoft has always been making it easier for you to keep in touch with those you care about most.
