The user-agent string includes the information needed (OS + Chrome version) and the console.get() function seems just right. The debugLog itself is not manipulated.
Only show sent_at for outgoing messages, matching Android.
The received_at timestamp reflects the time a message was saved locally.
It is necessary on both incoming and outgoing messages for sorting
purposes, but can be confusing in the context of an outgoing message
detail view, since users don't think about themselves "receiving" their
own messages, and may even interpret this as the time that a message was
received by their conversation partner's device.
// FREEBIE
This chrome alarm business is in place to help us wake up and check for
messages when running in the background. Without it, chrome will suspend
our app after a short period of inactivity. Upon waking, if the app
discovers it is not linked, it prompts you to link it. However, if
you've declined registration (i.e., because you already maxed out your
linked device limit, but chrome auto-added the app to another machine),
we should just wait until explicitly launched again.
Fixes#519
// FREEBIE
Previously, when processing a backlog of sync messages and their
delivery receipts, we would fail to mark some messages as delivered even
though we got a receipt. This was due to an async race condition between
saving a sync message and fetching it after the receipt arrives.
Fix by re-ordering idb requests such that we save the message first and
fetch it after.
Fixes#479
// FREEBIE
Typically, a view can specify its templateName and then use the default
render method on Whisper.View, except in some special cases like message
view or message detail where other operations are performed during
render.
// FREEBIE