![]() ![]() Have questions about the Basecamp 3 Android app? Let our awesome support team know by sending us an email. You can read our reviews and my responses on our Google Play listing. If they’re having problems with the app, I’ll ask them to contact support so we can help them in more detail. But it helps to close the loop and respond to the customer. ![]() Sometimes it’s hard to read a harsh review. Our customers might be having problems with the app, or they might not like some parts of the app. This is what makes Google Play stand out from the other app stores out there. I like to read and respond to every review. It also helps us to consider exactly what we should write. During on of his emoji fits he discovered that you can have emoji in our “What’s New” release notes.Īdding emoji instead of bullets here allows us to summarize the item with an image. On app release notesĭan Kim, programmer on the Android team, really likes emoji. I know it isn’t a huge variety, but I didn’t want all the phones to be exactly the same shape. Shown here are a Nexus 6P, Nexus 6, and a Nexus 6P. I also wanted to show a bit of variety in the devices. But I thought that by having the app description focus on Basecamp 3 the bigger thing I could focus on specifically Basecamp 3 for Android in the screenshots. On app screenshotsĪ lot of people/companies do this with their app screenshots. That’s because we talk about the app specifically in the screenshots. I decided to have the text description talk about Basecamp 3 the platform rather than specifically this Android app. ![]() I didn’t go too wild with formatting, but adding bold headers helped to highlight the tools that make Basecamp 3 great.īetter formatting to highlight the tools Basecamp 3 offers I did an overhaul of our app description so that it talked about the high level stuff Basecamp 3 could do. You can even add UTF-8 characters (★) like the Japanese Kanji Study app did. Strange that it isn’t really documented, but there it was. Turns out that you can do a lot with the Google Play description. That brought me to this post on Stack Overflow. I wasn’t sure how that was accomplished, so I did a Google search to find out. I noticed the app made use of special characters in the description. One day I was browsing Google Play and saw a listing for an app called Japanese Kanji Study. Google just gives you a big text box to write all about your app. When we first put up our page, the description for the app was minimally formatted. ![]()
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