Everyone loves the voice note feature in WhatsApp, since its, Quick and its your own voice not voice -to-type which never comes out what you want to say, why not an option on the phone to quickly respond to a comment with a voice note? I know we have this Sending a voice audio in the comments section (browser and Desktop) - #31 by Ankur2 but it looks like its for the browser/Desktop, its way more important for mobile when its not easy to type a reply

I think this feature is long overdue and should be added to Asana mobile App ASAP. To be clear, the ability to add a voice note to the task AND also to the comment section (similar to the Vimeo video feature).


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Earlier this year, I flew home to Toronto for a friend\u2019s wedding. Like many people who don\u2019t visit home that often, I was confronted with a choice: do I tell people I\u2019m home and submit to a social circus or do I lay low, pull my baseball cap down, and incognito mode my way through the city like an off-duty actor? As I was attending a large wedding with friends that I\u2019d known for over a decade, I figured my cover would be blown by the first night so, I sounded the alarm to my various Canadian group chats to plan hangs.

Two and a half hours after returning home, I was reunited with a variety of main and guest characters from my life including the best crispy shrimp in the world, friends from university and colleagues from old jobs, my first real estate agent and her husband, my go-to dairy-free chocolate ice cream, my friend\u2019s ex-boyfriend going on a first date with another friend and the greatest consistency in my life: the Toronto International Film Festival. There was a time when this reminder of self would have felt suffocating but, instead, it felt validating. All these fragments of myself, right where I left them, magnetized to me through pre-planning and serendipity.

With familiarity comes comfort. With comfort comes people being a bit too comfortable with you. The people who have known you the longest sometimes feel like they can say just about anything to you. Sometimes their honesty is unkind and, other times, it's heart-warming, but it\u2019s almost always entertaining. This is why, when a tipsy, old classmate came up to me and told me, unprompted, that he didn\u2019t like my writing and I that should stop, my first reaction was to laugh. My second was to sip my tequila soda and let him tell me more. I am always fascinated by how much people reveal when you shut up and let them speak and I wanted the tea from someone who considered themselves to be \u201Ckeeping it real.\u201D

He suggested that, instead of writing, I start a podcast \u2013 famously \u2018the brokest form of media\u2019 according to Azealia Banks. According to him, my writing voice differed slightly from the Brendon he remembered. Because I go to a Cognitive Behavioural Therapist, I know that the key to life is only absorbing things that validate your inner world and ignoring the things that threaten your reality. And so, what I heard was: You\u2019re so captivating in real life that no art form can ever ever ever ever capture you. Your presence is so expansive that there is no master of the English language who can confine you to a page. The man had a point.

And still, after midnight as I bustled towards where I was staying, wielding a McChicken1, I wrestled with his words. I didn\u2019t agree with him but I knew that my gift of the gab could be heard in some of my writing but not all. Depending on the project (fiction, non-fiction, a LOOSEY essay, or a commissioned piece), I intentionally dialed my voice up and down like an instrument.

Thinking this over, I lifted my phone to my lips to send a voice note to a mutual friend, re-hashing my opps old friend\u2019s comment, the wail of the icy wind licking the screen, the crinkle of a burger wrapper collapsing in my fists, my quick pace breathy bickers and the blinks of the apartment elevator all captured in the audio file. It was only after I hit send that I understood what he was saying. I had proven his point. What was true both in his reality and my CBTussied version of it was that for some things words are simply not enough.

As a writer \u2013 a writer of texts, emails, ransom notes, and the occasional essay \u2013 I\u2019d like to believe that what I experience can be expressed entirely by the written word. And for a few exceptional writers, this is true. For many, including myself, it is not. Recently, in a fiction workshop, I was told that for a skilled writer, there is no such thing as a synonym. This blew my mind: the idea that each word has a minute, specific meaning with no direct substitute. This is why voice notes are so compelling. When words fail and you cannot locate the correct one, your tone, background noise, and vocal inflection fill in the gaps, leading to a more emotive, entertaining response. A text is a script. A voice note\u2026 well, that\u2019s theatre.

Every good voice note has a hook. For me, close friends will know that my hook is one introductory note in which I say two words: \u201COkay, so.\u201D Record. Send. This is a warning for the receiver of the voice note. Take a bio break, go to a private area, grab some popcorn, and put in your headphones. You\u2019re about to go on a ride.

Pauses and cliffhangers. I have been known to end a voice note on a cliffhanger and leave for a couple of hours before I do another episode voice note. I promise this isn\u2019t entirely for suspense. It gives the receiver(s) a chance to catch up and respond. I enjoy when a voice note can act as a substitute for an actual phone call rather than be a voicemail dump that you listen to at the end of the day. As a result, I prefer to voice note when I know a captive audience is waiting. I genuinely love it when I drop the voice note and can see the bubbles of who is responding and to what part.

Get creative. Recently, I have been experimenting with a multitude of imagery to supplement voice notes like here when I was explaining the connection between a dream I had to someone\u2019s business I had no reason to be in. Sometimes a jury just needs an exhibit to lean the verdict in your favour.

The voice. I mean, duh. The message\u2019s timbre is guided by our tone, odd turn-of-phrases, stutters and laughter, bloopers and cut-offs. A capsule of your humanity flashes and then is no longer there, evaporating from your phone as soon as you\u2019re finished listening. The ephemeral nature of a voice note feels as intimate as a cupped whisper from your friend. It\u2019s precisely yours until it\u2019s no one\u2019s.

The above, imbued with my suspicious accents, and half-songs, the rattle of the subway, and the wails of the New York City sirens, is why my friend said what he said. It is why close friends believe they can say just about anything to you. It\u2019s because, in a way, you have been saying just about everything to them. And if you\u2019ve sent them a voice note, there\u2019s a good chance that they\u2019ve heard more than your words. They\u2019ve heard all of you.

The debate about voice notes versus text messages is a particularly divisive one. Those who are anti-notes say the practice is narcissistic, self-aggrandising, lazy, inconsiderate, annoying and obnoxious. Defenders of voice notes, like myself, disagree.

Once upon a time, the only way people were able to contact one another was to pick up a house phone. If no one was home, there was the option to leave a voice message on the answering machine. But with limited time to record and the risk of anyone else who lived there listening to what you had to say, messages were short and succinct. Are you free on the weekend? Call me back.

I\\u2019m among the cohort of Millennials who love to send lengthy voice notes. My record is 25 minutes and 13 seconds (around the same time as some daily news podcast episodes), while my average is around three minutes. But while I\\u2019ve embraced them, it\\u2019s clear not everyone loves them.

For the uninitiated, voice notes are short audio recordings that people send to each other via text or on social media platforms. Sitting somewhere between emails, voicemails, texts and phone calls, voice texts allow you to listen at your leisure without having to carve out time for a phone call, and mean you don\\u2019t have to try to interpret someone\\u2019s tone over text.

For me, voice notes work not because I love the sound of my own voice or because I think I\\u2019m too busy and too important to type out a text message, but because I\\u2019ve never been particularly concise. With voice notes, I don\\u2019t have limits.

But the lack of boundaries is both the beauty and the terror of these little audio files. If you love to prattle on while slowly getting to your point, you probably adore the freedom they bring. If you\\u2019re a storyteller, guiding your listener down a winding path with the journey being better than the destination, you have found your medium.

When texting arrived, everything changed again. The way we communicated with our friends and family transformed faster than you could say \\u201Cslide into my DMs\\u201D, and the need to verbally interact became null and void. We stopped talking and started typing lengthy missives about everything from what to buy at the shops for dinner to explainers about our marriage breakdowns. 152ee80cbc

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