Real question. I would like to know what drives you to hate Apple? (In terms of privacy of course because in terms of price it’s another story).

  • @Zak@lemmy.world
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    385 months ago

    Android doesn’t support iMessage

    I think it’s the inverse: iMessage doesn’t support Android.

    Those aren’t equivalent statements; the first implies that something about Android makes it impossible for Apple to produce an iMessage client for it when that is purely a business decision on Apple’s part.

    • @TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      You are correct and the person you’re responding to is wrong about just about everything they said. Funny to me they think mms is why those images look so shitty when no android users have ever experienced that without an ios device involved

      • @narc0tic_bird@lemm.ee
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        25 months ago

        Android users would use RCS for communicating with each other via the default messaging app on Android.

        MMS has a hard size limit depending on the carrier the sender uses, that’s independent of the sender using an Android phone or an iPhone. This limit can be as high as “more than 1 MB”, but also as low as 300 KB or even less. Compressing an image down to 300 KB will naturally incur a quality penalty.

        • @TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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          25 months ago

          Rcs is a new thing and not all android phones use it even now

          Photos sent from iPhones look like shit today and they did years ago. Rcs is not a factor.

      • @Zak@lemmy.world
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        65 months ago

        MMS does have size limits that can hurt image quality, but I have the impression iOS applies limits of its own that are considerably lower. I’m not sure why anybody in 2024 wouldn’t have at least a couple modern messaging apps, but it seems a lot of people don’t.

        • @TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Well yes exactly. I have noticed for years that every photo or video an iPhone sends me is worse quality than flip phones used to send/receive. Amazing to me that iPhone users fall for this trick

          Like they missed that the whole apple MO is to make them feel superior without evidence

          • @Zak@lemmy.world
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            35 months ago

            It seems like an odd decision to me, as it would make the iPhone look like it has a substandard camera to someone receiving media from one by MMS.

              • @Zak@lemmy.world
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                25 months ago

                It seems unlikely to have that effect when the recipient presumably communicates with people who have other brands of phone, from whom they receive better looking media.

                • @TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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                  15 months ago

                  I mean, it certainly has that effect. The in group “knows” your phone sucks and will shame you into getting an iPhone. That’s the idea and it’s probably worked millions of times.

                  • @Zak@lemmy.world
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                    25 months ago

                    Just doesn’t seem plausible to me. If Alice gets low-quality images from Bob and higher-quality images from Charlie, her most likely assumption if she’s not sophisticated enough to be aware of the cause is that Bob’s phone has a bad camera.

      • @Zak@lemmy.world
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        35 months ago

        Interest in RCS is recent - newer than iMessage, which launched in 2011. RCS with Google’s proprietary extensions is just another proprietary messaging app, and I am not particularly excited about it.

        even so far as “patch” a fix that was created to make it possible for their customers to communicate securely with Android users.

        There’s no shortage of options for doing that. What Apple wants is tight control over all of its walled gardens, which should be no surprise given the company’s history. They’re very good at making it appear as if decisions made to increase their profits are aligned with the interests of users. It’s probably even true that someone would have exploited the technique Beeper Mini was using to send spam if Apple hadn’t closed it.

          • @Zak@lemmy.world
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            15 months ago

            SMS fallback. A feature which you can use with any app on Android

            SMS fallback is not a common feature of internet-based messaging apps on Android. Signal used to do it, but does not now. I don’t think WhatsApp or Telegram ever did.