1) No more blue/green for outgoing messages. Just lock or no lock.
2) Use 9-patches instead of shapes for better bubble performance.
3) Use tinting rather than different colored assets.
4) Change outgoing status indicators so that they don't change
width of the bubble as they update.
5) Switch to using ..., check, double-check for pending, sent,
delivered rather than using bubble tone to indicate pending.
// FREEBIE
If the contact doesn't have an image, render a color-coded
background and the first letter of the contact's name.
1) Don't display anything during recipient resolution.
2) Display a # icon in material gray for recipients with no name.
3) Display a material group icon in material gray for groups with
no avatar icon set.
Closes#3104
// FREEBIE
1) Migrate from GSON to Jackson everywhere.
2) Add support for storing identity key conflicts on message rows.
3) Add limited support for surfacing identity key conflicts in UI.
1) Broke out the UI elements of the major Activites into stylable
attributes.
2) Created a 'light' and 'dark' theme for the newly stylable attrs.
3) Touched up some of the UI spacing.
4) Implemented dynamic theme switching support.
1) We now delay MMS notifications until a payload is received,
or there's an error downloading the payload. This makes
group messages more consistent.
2) All "text" parts of an MMS are combined into a second text
record, which is stored in the MMS row directly rather than
as a distinct part. This allows for immediate text loading,
which means there's no chance a ConversationItem will resize.
To do this, we need to include MMS in the big DB migration
that's already staged for this application update. It's also
an "application-level" migration, because we need the MasterSecret
to do it.
3) On conversation display, all image-based parts now have their
thumbnails loaded asynchronously. This allows for smooth-scrolling.
The thumbnails are also scaled more accurately.
1) When sending an SMS or MMS to multiple recipients, only show one
ConversationItem, but provide statistics on the number of recipients
delivered to.
2) Still break up the messages for secure and insecure messages.