![]() ![]() Making the experience more problematic is the fact that Messages’s logs are a bit of a mess. In a concession to that, at least Chatology does display the number of images or links in a conversation next to the respective filtering option. If you filter by images or links, you’ll often end up with multiple conversations that don’t have those types instead, Chatology will report “There are no images in this conversation.” I’d rather instead that conversations that don’t match simply not be shown. ![]() For example, sifting through search results can be a pain: As in Messages, you still need to click on each individual person to see the responses Chatology adds an extra layer by then requiring you to select each conversation in turn. While all of that can be helpful, I found myself wishing for more. In the case of both links and images, you can click an arrow icon to be taken to their location in the conversation at large. Images are shown inline-you can even Quick Look them by using the button in the toolbar or by selecting them and hitting the spacebar. Select any of them and you’ll see only that type of information, letting you quickly browse images or links in that conversations. ![]() In the rightmost pane, you can choose to filter by three types of data: conversation (text), images, and links. Chatology lets you quickly and easily filter conversations by contact, though some contacts may appear more than once. One downside here is that Chatology doesn’t do as good a job as Messages does of grouping the same contact if you converse with someone both via their phone number and their email address, they’ll appear as two separate contacts. Select a person and you’ll see a list of dates when you conversed with them. The leftmost pane breaks down your conversations by people (group chats are broken into a separate section). While those are quick and handy filters, it would be nice if Chatology also let you specify a more abstract range. A bar on the top of the window lets you choose from certain time windows, including all messages, only messages sent today, those sent in the last 30 days, or those sent in the last year. The latter usually, though not always, provides better results.Ĭhatology’s major attempt to improve on Messages’s searching is its ability to filter search results. ![]() Technical support will officially end on December 31, 2020.One major difference between Messages and Chatology’s respective search features: While the former will find a string even if its inside a word (for example, searching for “in” will return results with the word “think” and anything else that contains “in”), Chatology searches for the term as a whole word. Other big changes include an iOS-inspired design, pinned messages, inline replies, mentions, group photos, and more.Ĭhatology will still work on macOS Catalina and earlier but the app is no longer being sold and technical support will stop at the end of 2020.Īfter more than 7 years, Chatology is being discontinued due to major changes with Messages in the upcoming release of macOS Big Sur.Ĭhatology is no longer available for purchase but should continue to work with existing versions of macOS. Notably, the native search feature in Messages with Big Sur is fixed. Today Fantastical developer Flexibits has announced that it has discontinued Chatology as macOS Big Sur is nearing its debut with some major changes to Messages. This made it a popular app for not only finding specific messages but searching by date and tracking down images and links in messages. While searching in the Messages app on Mac has improved to some degree over the last seven years, when Chatology first launched back in 2013, Messages would often lock up for users when trying to use the search feature. Now with the public release of macOS Big Sur approaching, Chatology is being discontinued. For many years, Chatology by Flexibits was a go-to solution to fix the problems with searching the Messages app on Mac. ![]()
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