Everything Apple iOS 18 Will Do, Android Already Does (gizmodo.com)
from jeffw@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 03:49
https://lemmy.world/post/16505118

#technology

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autotldr@lemmings.world on 14 Jun 03:50 next collapse

This is the best summary I could come up with:


The iPhone’s next major software update will roll out later this year, featuring plenty of AI infusion—Apple Intelligence—plus other quality-of-life improvements across the platform.

At WWDC 2024, Apple announced that iOS 18 would finally let you place app icons wherever you want on the Home screen, freeing them from the stringent rail it was on before.

The iOS 18 developer beta shows that the color accents pick up based on your wallpaper and system theme.

Still, even though Apple quietly announced RCS support this week during its developer conference, Google doesn’t get its victory lap.

On the plus side, messages between iPhones and their green bubbles will be able to share features like high-resolution photos and Tapback animations later this year.

In Android 7, the Quick Settings in the notification shade added editable tiles, which were eventually opened up to third-party app developers.


The original article contains 888 words, the summary contains 143 words. Saved 84%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

JeeBaiChow@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 03:59 next collapse

Surprising no one?

TheRaven@lemmy.ca on 14 Jun 03:58 next collapse

Yes. Android already does all these things. But I think the things I’m excited most about are not on this list at all.

  1. A private local LLM. With the on-device context of my notes, messages, calendar, etc, I’m rather excited to have a more personal LLM than ChatGPT.

  2. Personal messaging via satellite. I love that I can stay in touch with people outside of a cell network.

helenslunch@feddit.nl on 14 Jun 04:10 next collapse

It’s a very short list but powerful.

AceSLS@ani.social on 14 Jun 04:10 next collapse

A private local LLM

Running on a phone? No way, not without being absolutely horrible, slow or making your phone churn through your battery anyway.

Good LLMs are olready slow on a GTX 1080, which is already miles faster than any phone out there

subtext@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 04:41 next collapse

I hear you, but also I would be shocked if Apple were to roll this out and it be an absolutely terrible experience. Like their MO is “luxury” products with “premium” experiences, it would not be fitting of the brand to have a piece of crap experience on their flagship announcement.

I’m willing to give them the benefit of the doubt on this one.

Eldritch@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 05:22 next collapse

You might wanna check with siri on that. Apple regularly failed at that even under the leadership of Jobs. And Tim Cook is no Steve Jobs. It’s already looking like it’s going to be just standard remote chat GPT. Hallucinations and all.

nullPointer@programming.dev on 14 Jun 05:41 collapse

apple maps has entered the chat.

mannycalavera@feddit.uk on 14 Jun 06:37 next collapse

But apple maps is much better now lederp.jpeg.

TheRaven@lemmy.ca on 14 Jun 14:35 collapse

Apple Maps was bad, yes. But they had their hand forced. Google started charging for their API (enough to cripple their app), and they had very little time to create one of their own.

That’s not happening here. No one is forcing their hand. If they didn’t release an updated Siri this year, nothing would happen.

felixwhynot@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 05:57 next collapse

I think It’s running on their “Private cloud compute” platform, not locally (I’m not sure though)

acosmichippo@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 06:21 collapse

some things are run locally.

habanhero@lemmy.ca on 14 Jun 06:46 next collapse

It’s not a LLM, it’s a much smaller model (~3B) which is closer to what Microsoft labels as a SLM (Small Language Models, e.g. MS Phi-3 Mini).

…apple.com/…/introducing-apple-foundation-models

Womble@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 11:50 collapse

Microsoft’s penchant for making up names for thing that already have names is neither here nor there. It is an LLM, in fact its already twice as large as chatGPT2 (1.5B params).

habanhero@lemmy.ca on 14 Jun 14:09 collapse

I do think it’s a useful distinction considering open models can be more than 100B+ nowdays and GPT4 is rumored to be 1.7T params. Plus this class of models are far more likely to be on-device.

kill_dash_nine@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 11:06 collapse

You would be surprised. If you haven’t tried to run a LLM on Apple silicon, it’s pretty snappy but like all others, RAM can be a significantly limiting factor unless the model is trimmed down to do very specific things to reduce the size.

acosmichippo@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 06:29 next collapse

also excited for hands free unlock of smart door locks. not sure if android/google home does that.

doleo@lemmy.one on 14 Jun 07:39 next collapse

Did I understand correctly that this is only going to be in the iPhone 15 pro? Because that’s a lot more expensive than a pixel, more than I’d ever spend on a phone tbh.

breadsmasher@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 10:00 collapse

The satellite im fairly sure is only pro

ByteMe@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 10:12 collapse

Satellite is on 14+

pineapplelover@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 20:48 collapse

We went hiking and tried calling emergency services but my friend’s 14 pro couldn’t get any signal for some reason. Idk what was wrong, me and my friend with pixels had no issues though.

ByteMe@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 21:17 collapse

Where do you live?

pineapplelover@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 00:48 collapse

This was in the LA mountains. Angeles national park

ByteMe@lemmy.world on 19 Jun 09:27 collapse

I don’t know. Pixels don’t support call vis satellite though

pineapplelover@lemm.ee on 19 Jun 15:25 collapse

Which really surprised me when pixels were able to call but all the iPhones including the iphone 14 pro wasn’t able to call

doodle967@lemdro.id on 14 Jun 09:05 next collapse

Satellite messaging is already available in Android 15 beta, and the LLM in the device will only be for iPhone 15 Pro and above, so most iPhone users will not be able to use it.

tudor@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 12:13 collapse

But there’s literally zero phones which can use it

MacNCheezus@lemmy.today on 15 Jun 16:46 next collapse

A private local LLM. With the on-device context of my notes, messages, calendar, etc, I’m rather excited to have a more personal LLM than ChatGPT.

No need to wait for iOS 18 to have that: llmfarm.site

TheRaven@lemmy.ca on 15 Jun 16:50 collapse

That’s great, but the fact it’s local and private means it can consume my personal data and be a more personal LLM. This just doesn’t hit that mark.

MacNCheezus@lemmy.today on 15 Jun 18:51 collapse

Yeah I guess it doesn’t allow access to those things yet although I don’t see why they couldn’t add that in a future release. The APIs for that already exist.

Joelk111@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 09:55 collapse

I’d add to that list. If Siri is 3/4 as capable as shown in the presentation, that’s sick. Android does not have that.

Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 04:34 next collapse

Me watching WWDC: “Android already does that.”

Me watching Google I/O “iOS already does that.”

acchariya@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 05:10 next collapse

Windows phone 10 had most of these things in 2015

Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 05:23 next collapse

It had everything except apps.

altima_neo@lemmy.zip on 14 Jun 05:27 next collapse

Ouch

manualoverride@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 09:22 next collapse

… and the users

01189998819991197253@infosec.pub on 16 Jun 02:05 collapse

Oof. I felt the heat from that burn from all the way over here

Brkdncr@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 06:30 next collapse

Qnx had a lot of features before windows phone in 2013.

zerofk@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 11:05 collapse

I miss Windows phone, still the most intuitive phone UI I’ve ever seen.

Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 14:38 collapse

Microsoft: “I think we really nailed this phone UI. We should make this the desktop computer experience too.”

mindlight@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 22:03 collapse

Ok my god. I had an Samsung Omnia 7 and I loved the Metro UI.

Remote Desktop to a Windows 2008 Server and try to open the Start Menu by clicking a single pixel in the left lower corner… Shoot me.

tahoe@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 07:52 next collapse

In ten years all phones will be crabs

cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 14 Jun 12:56 next collapse

if only i could be as successful as mr. krabs…

Nurgle@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 18:48 next collapse

I knew there was a link between cell phones and cancer!!

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 15 Jun 14:41 collapse

nah thats social media

HEXN3T@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 14 Jun 20:02 collapse

I’m experiencing déjà vu…

EDIT: Found this thread in the wild, then stumbled upon it. That’s why.

doodle967@lemdro.id on 14 Jun 08:53 next collapse

They often steal features from each other. Technological innovation has slowed down a lot because of monopolies

Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 15:48 collapse

I would argue that it’s the nature of having a mature and complex product. Adding new stuff is hard because you have a lot of legacy code / UX that you have to accommodate for. You need to move slower because it’s easier to break stuff in a more mature product.

I’d also argue that Apple and Google’s research teams are generally hearing the similar stuff out of their end users, so it’s to be expected that both companies are going to prioritize similar functionality.

That was my experience when I’ve worked on massive products. The complexity of the product impacts development speed, and shared understandings of user desires results in similar feature sets between competitors.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 02:56 collapse

Exactly. You get it. At the end of the day they are all going to get many of the same features.

They both copy from webOS anyway, at the end of the day. That webOS from Palm was way ahead at the time but lacked the hardware and Carrier support needed to succeed.

best_username_ever@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 04:41 next collapse

My last brand new Pixel phone had debug strings in the user interface and the UI was not responsive. It’s the daily annoyances and details that made me get an iPhone. Comparisons have been stupid since the beginning of smartphones.

doodle967@lemdro.id on 14 Jun 09:05 collapse

Can you elaborate on these problems?

AFC1886VCC@reddthat.com on 14 Jun 04:55 next collapse

I’m an android user but honestly bored of hearing this shit every single year. “Android already does that” yeah, we know. It’s like having a friend that is constantly trying to one-up you, or trying to steal attention away from you at your own birthday party.

iiGxC@slrpnk.net on 14 Jun 05:17 next collapse

Are you talking about apple copying the features but being a bit late?

GregorGizeh@lemmy.zip on 14 Jun 10:40 next collapse

Honestly who gives a shit, we are talking about phone OSes. I dont have a strong enough opinion about any of this to care which of them does what first. Use what you like and move on mentally

stoy@lemmy.zip on 14 Jun 10:49 collapse

Both Android and iOS copy from eachother

Cryophilia@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 19:19 collapse

As long as you own the fact that you paid more money for an inferior product because you think it will make you look cool.

deranger@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 19:46 collapse

I use Apple because it’s easier to manage a grandma and a daughter. Android is great if you’re technologically adept and can install a custom ROM, but I don’t want that freedom for my “users”. Grandma used to have an Android phone for years. I’d have to clean that thing out every few months because she would just click on shit. I switched her to iPhone and now when I check, there’s far less nonsense going on. It’s just easier to be the family admin this way. There are numerous other things that Android can also do, better, and for free, but at the cost of one’s time. It’s a trade off I’m willing to make. I reject the notion Apple is outright inferior; by which criteria? It’s also not about looking cool. Everyone has smartphones and they’re not special like they may have been in the 2000s. They’re the most commodified computer people use around the world. There’s no phone that makes you cool regardless of brand. It’s a fucking phone.

forgotaboutlaye@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:18 collapse

I would say the days of needing to flash ROMS is over, and Android is much more user friendly than it used to be. Especially if you’re on Pixel or Galaxy phones. My Mom, who’s almost 70, uses a Galaxy 21 FE, and loves it.

Not sure about the parental controls, etc that might help with keeping an eye on loved ones though.

then_three_more@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 05:36 next collapse

Yes, but apple will market them better so people will think it’s new .

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 04:15 next collapse

Been that way for a long long time now.

kratoz29@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 04:43 next collapse

I know this is an old feature, but do we have the NFC money transfer thingy?

I mean the one where you touch other phone with your phone and transfer money.

If we do I am unaware of it, I use AOSP.

SqueakyBeaver@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 14 Jun 19:05 next collapse

I think Google Pay used to have something similar, until Google axed the whole thing in favor of Google Wallet

kratoz29@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 20:17 collapse

… And that is why competition and “stealing features” is always good, being Apple’s or Google’s competition.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 03:25 collapse

Nope. Apple only.

I’m switching to iPhone because Google has let Android languish for years now. Samsung does more for android than Google does for goodness sake.

Apple users get fun and cool updates which is why they love it. Plus best in class photos and videos so they can share photos with friends and family with confidence, as opposed to android which has shit cameras and even shittier video.

kratoz29@lemm.ee on 16 Jun 07:58 collapse

Samsung does more for android than Google does for goodness sake.

I agree with you, even when I dislike One UI… I think Google although simpler is more of my liking… But oh boy stock AOSP is so limited that for some users it is even too similar to iOS, with the distinction that you can sideload easier (for now).

Lots of features that Google releases each Android iteration literally have been here in One UI, MIUI, Color OS you name it.

muntedcrocodile@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 04:45 next collapse

But android doesnt run the llm locally. Can someone please make a foss app that can do simmillar things.

RmDebArc_5@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 05:56 next collapse

You could use this

muntedcrocodile@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 07:55 collapse

The point of a local llm is u can give it access to contacts notes app control fucking everything simmillar to whaf apples done cool app tho.

habanhero@lemmy.ca on 14 Jun 06:50 next collapse

No phones can run “LLMs” currently because by definition, large.

Some Android phones however can and does run smaller models locally. Gemini Nano runs on Pixel 8 and can run on Samsung phones.

deepmind.google/technologies/gemini/nano/

JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 07:53 collapse

There isn’t a FOSS app, but there is this

ulkesh@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 06:06 next collapse

Yep, and Android also suffers from plenty of malware within the Play Store. I’d rather a company focus on combating that than worrying so much about minor features.

Edit> Yeah I figured I would be downvoted. People are very tribal and base their identity on such which means they will disagree with me. I am a pragmatist and don’t want to deal with malware and a shitshow of fragmentation — so while it does suck to be within Apple’s walled garden, it at least fits my needs.

praise_idleness@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 06:36 collapse

I’d rather have to avoid malware than to live in Apple’s version of heaven where I can’t do shit with a $1000 computer that I own.

nehal3m@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 07:04 next collapse

This is a common argument and it always makes me wonder what people mean by it. No ill intent from my end here, I use and like Apple as well as FOSS, but I can’t think of anything I can do on Android that I can’t on iOS. I admit I’m a very basic user though, I prefer to do heavy lifting on a laptop.

I am genuinely curious. Do you have some examples?

praise_idleness@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 07:35 next collapse

f-droid, termux, new rom if you want that… not paying $100/y just to install an app you developed(I know you can do that without paying but it’s not without major hassle)

nehal3m@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 07:50 collapse

I agree that alternative app stores are definitely a boon and I can’t wait for the EU to nail Apple to the wall over dragging their feet on that. Competition is good and that 30% fee monopoly is bullshit.

There are iOS terminal clients (I like Termius). The ROM thing, yeah… I installed /e/OS on my Fairphone 4 just for the privacy aspect, but functionally it’s not better or worse than what came in the box. There might be reasons to do it but utility-wise I don’t very well see the point in this day and age.

I hadn’t thought of the developer license requirement to run your own software, I personally don’t do that but I can see it being a deal breaker. Thanks for your thoughts. :)

praise_idleness@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 11:33 collapse

Yeah and it sucks that they are how they are. iOS is a nice OS and iPhone is a damn good device. But these things are just deal breaker for me.

redditReallySucks@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 14 Jun 07:52 collapse

Syncthing, Termux [X11], sideloading, a browser other than safari

nehal3m@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 08:06 collapse

Wait you can forward X through Termux? TIL.

RobotZap10000@feddit.nl on 15 Jun 10:01 collapse

$1000 computer stand*

Vitaly@feddit.uk on 14 Jun 07:09 next collapse

What about RCS support in the new IOS?

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 03:29 collapse

It has it

bdonvr@thelemmy.club on 14 Jun 07:47 next collapse

Android can do satellite messaging? Android phone makers are shipping on device LLMs?

I’m not an Apple fanboy nor do I use an iPhone currently but this headline is ridiculous.

doodle967@lemdro.id on 14 Jun 08:50 next collapse

Satellite messaging is already available in Android 15 beta, and the LLM in the device will only be for iPhone 15 Pro and above, so most iPhone users will not be able to use it.

Thistlewick@lemmynsfw.com on 14 Jun 09:36 next collapse

But is Android doing the on device LLM already? Because it sounds like they aren’t…

Railcar8095@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 09:47 next collapse

androidauthority.com/how-to-get-gemini-nano-on-pi…

Pixel 8 pro already does. I’m not sure, but I think Samsung has something too.

[deleted] on 14 Jun 10:34 next collapse

.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:27 collapse

I think Pixel 8 and 8a do too, or at least are capable, since they’re the same chip. I’d check, but I put GrapheneOS on my phone so I don’t have all of the Google stuff.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 03:08 collapse

I doubt it. The Pixels may be doing some but with Google I’m sure it’s not much as they always prefer server side computing.

iPhone will definitely aim to do most of it on device and use the server as little as possible. Which imo is the way to go.

Imprudent3449@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 10:40 next collapse

Satellite messaging is already available in Android 15 beta

Perhaps in software, but I don’t think there is a current phone that has the hardware to take advantage. For now, this is essentially an Apple only feature. It’s a pretty good bet we are going to see some flagships released with it in the next year though.

doodle967@lemdro.id on 14 Jun 12:26 next collapse

(For iPhone 14 and iPhone 15 series only)

Imprudent3449@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 14:44 collapse

And? How many android devices can you name that actually support satellite messaging today? When the feature DOES come on the android side, I imagine it is going to probably be flagship devices as well. Seems to be a silly thing to call Apple out for.

ITGuyLevi@programming.dev on 15 Jun 23:58 collapse

Its been on every Pixel since the 7 I believe, I realize that’s only a couple iterations but its out there.

signalsayge@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 16:29 next collapse

I know that Pixel 7’s and above support it. There are Reddit posts showing they have the feature already. Satellite messaging is just using standard 4G/LTE from Starlink. I wouldn’t be surprised if this is only an OS update away for most newer phones.

Imprudent3449@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 17:43 collapse

That’s pretty cool, I assumed they needed additional hardware. Thanks.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 03:06 collapse

Correct. It needs hardware and will only be on flagships, if the OEM includes it…

Another nice feature on the latest iPhone is the UWB chip egg even the older models have but now you can find another iPhone 15 user in a crowd if they share their location. The UWB chip will guide you right to them

I’ve wanted something like this for at least a decade for when my wife and I get separated in the Mall so that instead of calling her to see where she is (and she often doesn’t hear it ringing) I’d be able to just use the phone to lead me to her… Pretty useful in real life. And it also works for your misplaced tracker tile, air pods, iPad etc

Piece_Maker@feddit.uk on 15 Jun 20:32 collapse

Android 15 beta… so it’ll be available on phones, out of the box, without anyone having to build/install a custom, on phones actual normal humans buy in about 2030 then.

pycorax@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 10:16 next collapse

Android phone makers are shipping on device LLMs?

Do people actually want these?

GregorGizeh@lemmy.zip on 14 Jun 10:30 next collapse

Yes, in fact that is the only kind of ai i would ever use and entrust my data to. Not the apple one, but an open source model that is running only on my device and answering only to me; using the data I provide only for my interests? That one I would use.

Shawdow194@kbin.run on 14 Jun 11:49 collapse

I bet these LLM models wont be 100% locally hosted. I imagine some form of data will be piped back to a cloud server

[deleted] on 14 Jun 16:52 collapse

.

Cryophilia@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 19:17 next collapse

“secure” meaning “apple sees all your data”

Matriks404@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 21:56 next collapse

Isn’t Apple one of these companies that actually does not sell user’s data?

Cryophilia@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 03:35 collapse

So? I don’t want apple themselves knowing my data either.

kalleboo@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 02:00 collapse

The data is unavailable to Apple.

security.apple.com/blog/private-cloud-compute/

Cryophilia@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 03:59 collapse

I just honestly don’t believe that.

Glytch@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 20:44 next collapse

Is that why there are so many celebrity iCloud leaks floating around the internet?

lepinkainen@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 22:22 collapse

It wasn’t a software issue, but a human issue. People got scammed and gave their logins away.

This system is built so that nobody can access it and they’ve went to extreme lengths to make it so. It’s also available for auditing, it hardware and software.

jodanlime@midwest.social on 14 Jun 21:16 collapse

LMFAO

lepinkainen@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 22:20 collapse

“It’s a very thoughtful design. Indeed, if you gave an excellent team a huge pile of money and told them to build the best “private” cloud in the world, it would probably look like this.”

  • Matthew D Green, cryptography teacher at Josh Hopkins

You can go argue with him if you disagree.

Imprudent3449@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 10:42 collapse

LLM is AI correct? If my phone is going to do AI at all, I prefer it be done on device for sure. For privacy reasons if nothing else. But it’s not anything I’ve really looked into. I have the S24 and the only AI feature I use is the Circle to search… which I don’t consider to be AI.

Jakeroxs@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 18:04 next collapse

They add a kinda nifty “copy subject” option that is supposedly local AI stuff to the samsung gallery, fun to mess with

Eiim@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 15 Jun 01:54 collapse

LLM is a form of AI, specifically the text AIs like ChatGPT that have suddenly made “AI” a dinner table term. AI in some form or another is almost definitely being used in your device - even for things like filling in gaps in low-quality voice calls, and probably has been for a while. But the problem is that unlike those “old” AIs, LLMs require some significant power to run, so running them on phones will probably require meaningful trade-offs. But the increased security is also a meaningful benefit.

jose1324@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 10:58 collapse

“Android phone makers are shipping on device LLMs?”

…yes?

doodle967@lemdro.id on 14 Jun 08:16 next collapse

It either already exists or can be added.

IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 09:26 next collapse

Nobody cares nerds. Nobody.

superterran@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 10:45 next collapse

Good for Android, now if they’d only implement all of the Apple-only features that create the lock-in appeal then maybe they’ll get somewhere. When my Pixel Buds flow seamlessly from device to device to the third and fourth device then maybe we’ll talk

Squizzy@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 12:06 next collapse

Presumably need Pixel everything for that but even then, as an android user I would rather be locked into an Apple eco than google.

superterran@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 12:52 collapse

My SO has current gen Pixel devices all around and it’s yet to materialize. To my mind, Google could sync Bluetooth pairing info across all Android devices if they put their minds to it. But even if they did, they would need to work with Microsoft and other vendors to get the kind of ambiguity that would compete with Apple’s product line. As it stands, if you buy the Apple product you get the best hardware and the software compliment is five years ahead than the competition. Google and Microsoft need to leapfrog

Ironfacebuster@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 14:07 next collapse

I have the Pixel Buds Pro and they kinda do that, but yeah not very well. I have them paired to my phone and my laptop, and sometimes randomly they’ll silently disconnect from my laptop and permanently pause whatever I was watching if my phone plays a notification. I can’t fix it until I disconnect from and reconnect to my laptop multiple times.

One time I was watching a video on my laptop and they randomly connected to my desktop! I hadn’t used them on my desktop in at least a year, until then!

All in all, they can flow seamlessly, but it’s 60/40 on if it works properly

At least the noise cancelling and passthrough are fun to mess with

superterran@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 15:49 collapse

How many devices do you switch between? For me, it’s phone, tablet, two laptops and my watch. I think that the Pixel Buds can switch between two without needing a re-pair. Meanwhile, I can stream my Apple TV audio to my AirPods as they’re also an audio source! Even if Google released basic support for this today, they still wouldn’t be able to fully catch up because they have no truly realized desktop/laptop OS so I’d live in a mixed ecosystem.

Ironfacebuster@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 21:14 collapse

I have them paired to a few things, but only ever use them on my phone and laptop. That’s why I was so confused when it connected to my desktop, since it was last paired and actually used a long time ago.

I guess it’s a complicated issue for me, since they’re paired with more than 2 things but only ever connected to 2 things

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 03:19 collapse

Exactly. Also memoji on Android would be nice as well as the better emoji content on iPhones…

The bedtime mode on iPhone is also very cool as well as the ability to set your contact photo which other iPhone users will see when they call you.

Plus I think Apple have done a better job with widgets because they look nicer and are stackable.

Imo as an android user, android has been neglected by Google for a while and apart from Samsung no other OEM’s are adding for software to rival Apple.

Which is one of many reasons why I’ll be switching back to iPhone. I see more and better user features being added to iOS.

The only thing Google has done with android lately is Material You, and it’s not as rich as apples customisation. And circle to search is a stupid feature which only benefits Google more than the user.

Eggyhead@kbin.run on 14 Jun 10:48 next collapse

Cool. Good for Android users.

cryptix@discuss.tchncs.de on 14 Jun 11:12 next collapse

As much as I hate apple and google, I want a future where all these can be done locally without massive servers and sending all data to cloud . Apple clearly have a edge over google in that regards.

noughtnaut@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 12:20 next collapse

Ah, you mean like the sync that Palm OS used to have? Yup, that was neat, and I’m still waiting for Android to pick up some of the neat features from back then.

fjordbasa@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 12:26 collapse

I miss palm OS. I think it had some undeniable jank but it also had great features and a bit of “charm”. I’m pretty sure I still remember most of the Graffiti alphabet!

ZeroPoke@lemmy.ca on 14 Jun 15:39 collapse

I totally bought a Palm off eBay few months ago. It’s been fun to use Palm OS 5 again. I got a model that actually has WiFi, which was also interesting to set up a AP that was compatible with it.

One I got had a dead battery, ordered a new one, it was so much nicer to open the old tech and replace the battery. Just screw and little solder. No glue and impossible small stuff to work with.

Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 21:24 collapse

It definitely comes at a cost though. The private local models will be inherently dumber because of less compute and smaller data sets.

And, unfortunately, this is a hard thing to communicate to the public. All they know is that Assistant responded to a request better than Siri.

cryptix@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Jun 10:43 collapse

Look into the past , what a huge server does now a small SBC can do now . In 10 years what chatgot runs in cloud could potentially be running in a smartphone

Dariusmiles2123@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 11:31 next collapse

I’m looking forward to iOS 18 as I have to run an iPhone for work.

From what I understand, this update is gonna bring a lot of things iOS was lacking in terms of personalization.

Now I would really want them to improve on how things are handled outside of their walled garden as I’ll never buy a new mac (maybe an old one to run Linux) and they’re never gonna convince me with their old tricks of keeping special features between Apple devices.

We need a Linux version or equivalent to iTunes to backup your phone, better interoperability with Windows/Linux…

The iPhone is a great product but I feel like the walled garden is preventing me from fully enjoying it.

LeTak@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 11:45 collapse

On Linux you can use libimobiledevice.org for backups and management.

Dariusmiles2123@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 12:43 collapse

Yeah I know but honestly it looks really complicated for someone who’s not at ease with terminal. Just finding the instruction to install it on Fedora (so no sudo apt install) is difficult, so I’m scared to do anything wrong, especially with important data.

So now I’m still using a Windows 10 virtual machine even if it’s awfully slow on my not powerful computer…

cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 14 Jun 12:55 next collapse

i still like my android but i do wish they would get back to prioritising widgets again, like apple has done - and get developers to do it as well.

i also like apple watch over my samsung watch. i think the apple watch is top in it’s class - that combined with apple fitness+.

if apple could set defaults, use actual browsers (like android), and have an open in menu like android, i’d switch. i don’t think i could ever get used to apple’s notifications though. android is still superior there.

aclarkc@midwest.social on 14 Jun 17:36 collapse

I’ve switch between iOS and Android, but good news on one of those you can set your default browser now on iOS.

support.apple.com/en-us/104975#

cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 14 Jun 18:21 collapse

not the same, though; browsers are still webkit.

also you can’t set phone or messaging or other defaults. in android, i can not have a default and get a pop up every time (or use linksheet) to ask how i want to open something

aclarkc@midwest.social on 15 Jun 00:08 collapse

That’s a fair a good point!

jay9@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 13:13 next collapse

I didn’t realise android did free SMS over satellite when there is no cellular connection

signalsayge@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 16:23 next collapse

Looks like it’s been available on some android devices for at least a month. I don’t know about free though, I think it depends on your carrier. I know T-Mobile has been talking about supporting it using Starlink satellites.

reddit.com/…/satellite_messaging_option_appeared_… t-mobile.com/…/first-spacex-satellites-launch-for…

jay9@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 00:03 next collapse

For me the importance is that it’s free - I wouldn’t even pay $5 a month for a service that I’d use in very unlikely situations probably once or twice a year.

peanutyam@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 00:25 collapse

But with the iPhone it’s free, and not carrier dependent and works outside of the United States for those of us in the rest of the world….

lud@lemm.ee on 14 Jun 23:40 collapse

Isn’t the satellite thing just free temporarily?

jay9@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 00:02 collapse

They said it’s free for 2 years with any new purchase of iPhone since iPhone 14; and now they’ve extended it for 1 more year. No one has had to pay for any of it yet - and it’s unknown if/when/how it’ll be a paid service

HEXN3T@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 14 Jun 20:17 next collapse

Like math notes. And handwriting fonts. And a customisable control centre. And phone mirroring. And locking apps natively. And pretty much all of Apple Intelligence (particularly Genmoji because I want a hyena emoji and Unicode doesn’t have one).

HEXN3T@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 14 Jun 20:40 collapse

Hold on. This control centre thing is really annoying me over here on Android. iOS separates notifications and control centre into two separate groups. I have to swipe down twice on Android to do what took a single swipe on iOS. On top of this, clearing all notifications closes the drawer after a delay, automatically. Why? I can close it faster myself, and sometimes, I want it to stay open, but NOPE!

And then the control centre itself. Volume control just… doesn’t exist (key word: CONTROL). Brightness (which I use often) is all the way at the top, rather than the middle. Then, the control centre is split into PAGES at HALF SIZE, and they’re all just wide rectangular buttons. Then, no volume control. What the HELL is this!? I could long press to get an easy brightness slider for my torch, everything internet related was quickly accessible in a single square, and now you’re telling me iOS is even FURTHER ahead?

Did I mention there’s NO. VOLUME. CONTROL. I have to press a volume button, then a tiny on-screen button after that, and then I get sliders after I wait for the menu to pop up. Granted, that’s sliders (plural), but fuck me. This one HURTS. I sometimes find the buttons a little bit too stiff, so I usually use on-screen controls during screen on, and buttons while off.

So much for owning my phone, since I can barely change any of this, and I can only see the way my control centre looks after I’ve edited it.

FUCK!

This absolute abhorrence. The Gods forsake this wretched control centre design. It is genuinely agonising using this afterthought of an interface. This cannot stand.

trollblox_@programming.dev on 14 Jun 22:55 next collapse

I have to swipe down twice on Android to do what took a single swipe on iOS.

swipe down with two fingers

BigFatNips@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jun 23:25 next collapse

Yooo that’s fire

HEXN3T@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 15 Jun 02:21 next collapse

This… works. Ultimately one of the smaller issues (and different swipe regions are just easier), but it’s a little faster.

Nutteman@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 03:33 next collapse

Wtf how have I used android for this long without knowing?

Neon@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 16:03 next collapse

I guess one-handed phones are really dead now

Petter1@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 17:31 collapse

I switched to a iPhone mini not long ago, and I love how well it works one-handed

MR_GABARISE@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 19:45 next collapse

You can even quickly swipe twice.

trollblox_@programming.dev on 16 Jun 18:36 collapse

yeah that’s what I do normally. the people in this thread are just a bunch of complainers

01189998819991197253@infosec.pub on 16 Jun 02:10 collapse

TIL. I just set the right side of the drawer to pull it all the way down.

awesome_lowlander@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 15 Jun 01:57 next collapse

That doesn’t sound like my phone. Have you tried launchers? Or it could be specific to your manufacturer. That’s part of the problem with android - too many manufacturers wanting to customise their interface without a clear idea of what good UX is

HEXN3T@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 15 Jun 02:20 collapse

I use Niagra. Launchers are home screen only. And, as long as I use anything related to stock Android, I’m stuck with this.

DAMunzy@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 15 Jun 16:26 collapse

I hate Apple and love Android but I can see the value in all the stuff you said. Doesn’t make me want to change teams but just letting you know there is an Android fanboy that sees value in what you said.

Matriks404@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 21:52 next collapse

To be honest as an Android user, if Apple makes their phone less locked down and give more affordable choices for phones I may try an iPhone, as I am a bit fed up with Android, and there are no other real alternatives.

IamAnonymous@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 00:30 next collapse

iPhone SE is their affordable line. Don’t see that changing anytime soon as it sells well.

Matriks404@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 00:34 collapse

It still costs nearly as much as minimal wage in my country (OK, ~$200 USD less), I am not going to buy it anytime soon.

geography082@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 03:53 next collapse

Locked to trust them. I have been a long time iPhone user. Is by far the best mobile OS. Is overpriced , yes and since at this point of my life where I give less fucks , next one would be whatever good cheap crap I can get.

MacNCheezus@lemmy.today on 15 Jun 16:51 next collapse

You realize that Android being too open is a major reason for why it sucks and iOS being more locked down is precisely how they avoided going the same way, right?

Hammerheart@programming.dev on 15 Jun 17:41 collapse

Can you elaborate because this is not obvious to me. Maybe we sre thinking different things when we talk about “openness” in this context.

MacNCheezus@lemmy.today on 15 Jun 18:26 collapse

A walled garden works because it keeps the weeds out

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:23 next collapse

I’m happy with GrapheneOS on my Google Pixel. It’s basically Android without the Google crap. It’s not for everyone though.

That said, I’d really like a third option. iOS is too locked down, Android phones have short support cycles (getting better, and is a huge reason why I picked Pixel), and Linux phones have fundamental hardware and software issues. I’m sad Microsoft, Palm, and Blackberry all gave up, there were interesting things happening in the mobile space back then.

ITGuyLevi@programming.dev on 15 Jun 23:52 collapse

I switched to Graphene in December and I can’t say it enough, GrapheneOS is everything I wanted Android to be for the past 15 years.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:54 next collapse

Same. I thought it would be a bigger change, but it turns out I only need 5-6 apps from the Play store, and 3 need Google Play services. I only need those periodically, so I leave them in a separate profile.

My main profile has a bunch of F-Droid apps and a few manually side-loaded that update themselves. It’s pretty nice! I have also disabled most permissions on most apps, far more than stock Android lets me do (esp. sensors permission).

It’s pretty much what I want from Android. There are a handful of things I wish it did (I like shaking the phone on my Moto to get the flashlight), but all in all it’s what I expect from Android. I still want a Linux phone though.

ITGuyLevi@programming.dev on 16 Jun 01:59 collapse

I use Tasker to handle stuff like shaking for a light, enabling certain DND settings, etc.

I would love a phone that could dock and be a desktop replacement, I’m fine with using moonlight or something else to reach back to a server for games or bigger lifts than my phone can handle.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 04:58 collapse

Cool, I’ll have to play with Tasker. I just got it recently and I think I have all my data synced over, but I haven’t gotten too far in customization.

BTW, do you know of anything like Niagara launcher? I liked that one quite a bit, but I didn’t find anything FOSS to replace it. The default is okay, I just want something that only lists a handful of apps to reduce clutter.

ITGuyLevi@programming.dev on 19 Jun 01:19 collapse

I just use the default one and put a couple folders on the home screen (one for stores, one for games, one for media, one for utility), then a couple widgets on the next screen over.

01189998819991197253@infosec.pub on 16 Jun 01:24 collapse

Are persistent notifications still a requirement for background apps, such as Signal? One of the reasons I switched to CalyxOS. Not the Signal persistent notification specifically, but it, in combination with all the others I needed running in the BG, made it very difficult to not miss new notifications. I like CalyxOS just fine, but I agree with you on GrapheneOS. I was very excited that it was exactly as I’ve always wanted android to be (but wasn’t), except for those persistent notifications.

ITGuyLevi@programming.dev on 16 Jun 02:06 collapse

I haven’t had to do anything special for signal, Home Assistant has some issues with permissions and not always reporting back if its on in the background. Still trying to figure out why its fine on mine but not on my son’s phone.

The fine tuned controls for things like network access, storage and contact scopes, etc. are just amazing.

01189998819991197253@infosec.pub on 16 Jun 02:28 collapse

You don’t have a persistent (albeit silent) notification for Signal and still receive push notifications? If so, my next OS may just be GOS.

The fine tuned controls are different than stock android? I thought GOS doesn’t alter the stock experience (more than is required to decrapify the OS)?

ITGuyLevi@programming.dev on 19 Jun 01:15 collapse

No, the only persistent notification I have to put up with is Tasker.

I honestly can say how far from stock it is because I have no clue when the last time I saw unadulterated Android (if ever lol), but it doesn’t have a lot of crap added to it.

01189998819991197253@infosec.pub on 19 Jun 02:16 collapse

That’s really great to hear. I’m currently on CalyxOS and, besides the Google crap added to stock, it’s very close to the last time I used stock (granted, it’s been a hot minute). Next phone will likely be GrapheneOS, as I believe my posture has shifted since I decided on CalyxOS, and the lack of persistent notifications for background tasks (such as Signal) was the main deterrent that allowed me to settle into a more relaxed posture.

Stalinwolf@lemmy.ca on 15 Jun 23:42 next collapse

With or without the Google services, I bought my first Pixel years ago and have never looked back.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 02:53 collapse

I can’t afford a new one so I’m looking at used IPhone’s to get. Because Apple tends to support them for 5+ years, I still should get at least 2 years OS updates with a used one.

I’m thinking iPhone 13 is a good one to get.

Michal@programming.dev on 14 Jun 22:03 next collapse

Good, I’m happy for iOS users. They always wait patiently for the features and they often come in a polished form.

anon_8675309@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 01:05 collapse

It’s a myth that Apple waits to release features until they’re “polished “.

rusticus@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 03:40 next collapse

Android is 5 years ahead of iPhone 60% of the time

[deleted] on 15 Jun 05:14 next collapse

.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 15:26 collapse

Not anymore. That was true for a few years but iOS has definitely overtaken Android. Plus when you include the entire Apple devices ecosystem, Arcade, TV+, Homepod, Continuity etc iOS FAR, FAR outstrips Android.

Android is a stand alone device but iPhone is one piece in a mosaic of devices and services.

This is why now, after the last 4 years on Android, I’m switching back to iPhone.

Plus the hardware and cameras on budget Android devices are shit and I’m tried of paying for shit.

The Snapdragon 695 came out 3+ years ago and yet Qualcomm just released this year the Snapdragon 6s gen 3, which is … the 695 with a slightly higher clock speed… 🤦

For €300 - €550 they keep selling us the same junk with a different name and colour and I’m done with that bs.

quarterlife@lemmy.sdf.org on 15 Jun 15:45 next collapse

As evidenced by: this article

Oh wait

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 02:39 collapse

Are you on weed? This is my opinion, it doesn’t need any article…🤦

quarterlife@lemmy.sdf.org on 16 Jun 18:14 collapse

No the article you are replying to, lay off the crack.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 18:55 collapse

😂. Good one! Touché

hOrni@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 15:46 next collapse

You are using “they keep selling us the same junk with a different name” to justify apple? Hilarious.

i2ndshenanigans@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 16:40 collapse

As someone that flips between Samsung and iPhone they all are selling us the same shit every year. Smartphones in general have gotten stale. I can’t remember anything in the last 5 years that anyone has announced that made me think I have to upgrade my device. Maybe it’s just me but the tech seems boring now.

OrgunDonor@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 16:56 next collapse

Phone tech is really boring. Almost everything looks the same, they are all x% faster than last year’s model which still does everything perfectly fine. In terms of hardware, the phone has kinda reached the optimal place.

I’m not the target audience for bleeding edge phones though. I take photos, listen to music(using Bluetooth and wired headphones), browse the web and message people. I don’t really play games or use it for work.

By far the most interesting thing to me is foldable phones. I really like the idea of a flip phone, but I don’t think it would be too happy sitting in my sweaty pocket while I cycle.

hOrni@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 18:47 next collapse

Foldable phones are the dumbest shit. Only for people who like to spend too much money on an everyday object. It’s introducing an unnecessary potential point of failure.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:14 collapse

Same, but I don’t really take pictures either, despite having arguably the best smartphone camera on the market (Pixel 8). I bought my phone because it has 7 years of updates, and I got a good deal on a used one.

So yeah, smartphones really aren’t my thing. If it browses the web, makes texts and calls, and works with my bluetooth headphones, I’m happy. I don’t need a big screen (I even “downgraded” a bit in screen size) and I’d prefer no selfie cam (almost never use it for video calls), but I work with what I’ve got to choose from.

hOrni@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 18:23 next collapse

Phones aren’t stale. They peaked. That’s like saying umbrellas design has gotten stale. You just can’t improve the design much more.

quarterlife@lemmy.sdf.org on 16 Jun 18:30 collapse

For me it’s foldables, those have come a long way in a short time and I find them to be very compelling.

Once they perfect it though it’s going to be back to the same stale shit.

emils@lemmy.ml on 15 Jun 17:18 next collapse

What’s more far ahead than an ecosystem that you can’t leave without replacing all devices because they work poorly with anything other than Apple. If you don’t like all their products or Apple makes changes that you disagree with then sucks to be you, I guess.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:18 next collapse

Exactly. I have a work Macbook Pro, which I honestly dislike, and my wife has an iPhone and iPad (iPad is for drawing because the Apple pencil is better than alternatives). My wife won’t use an Apple computer because her games don’t work (mostly Lost Ark, but also others), I won’t use one because I much prefer Linux, and we don’t want yet another streaming service.

So Apple gets a big “meh” from me. It’s better than Windows for me, so I guess there’s that, but I’m really not interested in an “ecosystem.”

dustyData@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 23:59 collapse

Apple pencil is better than alternatives

I can see your wife has never actually used a good drawing tablet. Wacoms beat even the latest iPad for drawing and are a tiny fraction of their cost.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:01 collapse

Aren’t wacoms PC-accessories? She wants an independent tablet for drawing at the park and whatnot.

She has a wacom tablet for home though, but she’s never gotten the hang of it. Maybe I’ll push her to try again now that she’s more familiar with digital art.

dustyData@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 00:17 collapse

There’s the MobileStudio Pro and Wacom is hardly the only brand. There’s also the Huion Kamvas Studio. Both are cheaper than an iPad Pro and both come in multiple sizes. I’m not sure about Huion but Wacom has had rotating barrel sensors on the pen for almost a decade.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:58 collapse

Cool, I’ll put that on the list next time we shatter a screen or something.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 02:35 collapse

That is the catch. I agree that there is lock in, I’ve experienced that, but in return you get unparalleled interconnectivity.

Plus you get 5+ years OS updates on iPhone and iPad Vs 2-3 years on Android, budget Android. And for the money, the cameras will be better than any budget Android and the CPU will be better for gaming. Plus there is a world of accessories you just don’t get with Android.

As cool as it is to have split screen or an SD card on my phone, when I need to take a picture with friends/family and they always come out terribly because all Android’s under €750 have shit cameras, then none of that matters. An experience I recently had. We tried 3 android phones and in the end the friend with an iPhone got the best shot and that one was shared on the group.

Super embarrassing for Android that 3 different phones tried to get a decent semi low light photo and couldn’t but a year’s old iPhone got a great shot with 1 click.

windie@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 18:39 next collapse

they keep selling us the same junk with a different name and colour and I’m done with that bs.

Proceeds to buy an iPhone.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 02:38 collapse

Except the iPhone isn’t junk - best in class CPU, best in class cameras, best in class accessories, magsafe, best in class security(FaceID), best in class messaging with iMessage, best in class emoji/animoji/memoji, best in class OS updates, busy in class animations and app design, best in class post sales service, best in class devices ecosystem…

Huge difference.

EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 03:28 next collapse

iPhones haven’t had best in class cameras in years. One of the pain points of moving to iPhone was giving up the superior camera experience of Google pixels and Samsung phones.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 04:36 collapse

  1. Pixel is good but outside the US is barely available
  2. The only good Samsung cameras are on the Galaxy S line aka premium models. The rest of the phones, the ones most people buy, are crap.

For the price of a used iPhone there is NO phone that can take as good photos and videos

EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 04:47 next collapse

Not at all. iPhones are very capable point and shoot camera phones, but even at a more budget price point iPhone cameras haven’t been best in class in at least 5 or 6 years.

The pixel 5-6 were like $600 phones with unmatched cameras and even better camera software. The modern non-pro pixels like the 7 and 8 also beat out all but the pro max models of recent iPhones.

Similar to that the Samsung fan edition phones were beating out iPhone cameras at a $600 price point brand new.

That isn’t to say there’s anything wrong with iPhone cameras, but they’re not nearly the best either. Even at lower price points. Like it’s becoming quite clear that you are just saying things at this point because you really like iPhones. But almost none of the things you claim are remotely true.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 05:39 collapse

I’m not saying that because I like iPhones.

You are in the US so pixels are widely available and cheap. As is the FE series.

Where I live, outside the US, the Pixel is not sold nor will Google let you buy it. So pixel is a no go.

The Fan Edition Samsung costs virtually the same as the regular edition where I live, if you can find an FE. It costs €700+…

99% of our population can only afford €250-300 phones. €700 is out of reach unless you’re single, hehe a great job and still live with mum and dad. Or you are the 1%.

So at that price ALL the android cameras are shit, shit, shit.

So, if I import from the UK a used iPhone 12 it will cost about €350. At that price NOTHING can touch it below €700.

Everything below €700 is Chinese cheapie and Samsung cheapie, also known as crap phones.

Ibuthyr@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Jun 21:12 collapse

I don’t get it. I live in Germany and own a pixel 7 pro. I had no trouble buying it. In fact, I just bought one for my wife. Decided I don’t need the pixel 8 because the 7 pro works like a charm. Where do you live that you can’t buy Pixels?

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 04:20 collapse

Cyprus. Also in the EU but no official sales or support. I’m sure it’s the same in most countries in South America, Africa, Asia and the Far East.

Ibuthyr@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Jun 21:09 collapse

If you want good photos, buy a real camera with a good lens and learn to manipulate raw files. Smartphone pictures will only look good on a tiny screen. The amount of postprocessing that takes place without any of your input makes the photos look bland. That said, android phones do have the better hardware and by saving the raw files you at least get to develop the pictures yourself, the way you want it, sort of.

danielfgom@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 04:19 collapse

I have a great pocket camera but it’s not practical to carry it wherever I go. Most photos are taken spontaneously and for that reason you want a great camera on your smartphone.

Also, most Android phones cannot capture RAW.

Ibuthyr@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Jun 21:06 collapse

  • certain android phones have better cameras
  • I don’t know about CPUs, but that’s kind of a non-issue as phones are very fast anyway, even the low-budget ones. I’ll bet there are android phones with higher performance though.
  • face unlock has got to be the dumbest way to secure your phone. All one has to do is point the damn thing at your face and it’s unlocked
  • MagSafe is a weird thing to list. Wireless charging kind of makes it redundant, right? Plus there are aftermarket usb-c adapters to have the exact same thing.
  • no one uses iMessage outside of the USA
  • emojis? Seriously?
  • I’ll give you the updates one, it’s easier to update hardware that’s trapped in a walled garden
  • animations?
  • iOS has some very high quality apps, I’ll give you that one too

All of the above doesn’t really matter though. I have an iPhone for work and I just hate the user interface. It’s just very inefficient and clunky. The worst thing is how it’s so difficult to get some real ad blocking going. Also, the feeling of being trapped in their ecosystem has an almost claustrophobic effect on me.

Google sucks a big dick too however, just like the internet itself does. I’m really contemplating on going back to a feature phone soon.

EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 03:35 collapse

Oh no most definitely. Since I’ve been using iOS (IOS 15) every update is just playing catchup on Android features. It’s actually why I finally switched from Android to iOS. iPhones have abandoned so much of their own design philosophy in favor of Androids, that iOS is practically just another flavor of Android like Samsungs or Huaweis. The friction to switch between phones has never been lower. I did however have to wait for iPhones to finally bring decent refresh rates to iOS before switching (above 60hz).

Cornpop@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 04:20 next collapse

Ok. And android still sucks compared to Apple. Always full of bloatware and can never get updated or long term support. Only the Google phones have a decent OS

Snapz@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 04:39 next collapse

This is a ridiculous take. You can change any of that in Android easily, Apple locks you into BS without extreme measures

Elektrotechnik@feddit.de on 15 Jun 04:54 collapse

So you most likely wanted to say “and Samsung still sucks compared to Apple?” Google phones also run Android, you know.

brognak@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 16:37 collapse

Samsung has even cut most of the horseshit out. My S22 had like a few Samsung apps, they live in a folder and I never see them. But that is similar to all of the Apple apps you couldn’t remove either (don’t know if that’s changed, haven’t had an iPhone since the 4)

Snapz@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 04:38 next collapse

Always was

Neon@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 16:00 next collapse

The only thing iOS really does better imo is the quick settings menu

Holy shit it sucks on Android compared to iOS

It looks better, it has more options, it has better overview and grouping

vox@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 16:46 collapse

except it’s basically made useless by the fact that wifi/bt toggles don’t actually toggle off their respective radios, but just disconnect from the current network

flop_leash_973@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 17:43 next collapse

I mean Android, and Samsung in particular, borrow from Apple all the time as well. Hell Samsung frequently bad mouths Apples for the anti-consumer choices one year then follows suit and does the same thing in a year or 2 themselves.

These kinds of takes are not the flex some seem to think they are in my opinion.

Dkarma@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 21:06 next collapse

Yeah remember when Samsung charged you double?

No ?

Yeah me neither.

KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 15 Jun 21:55 collapse

Eh? Their bog standard device cost is usually pretty on par. And Apple definitely isn’t charging you double.

dustyData@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 23:52 collapse

Which one is bog standard? Samsung has over 12 different models on production that range from 150$ to 1900$, including two models with folding screens. Apple has 3 4 almost identical phones, they’re all overpriced hardware.

KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Jun 01:31 collapse

The hardware is overpriced, absolutely. But it’s also typically better than Samsung.

By big standard I mean their “low end” device. The comparable Samsung of each generation is usually within ~$200 of the Apple model.

miridius@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 07:18 next collapse

Better? The Apple hardware is always significantly worse than competition in the same price class. Most of the price of an iPhone goes to their excessive marketing and record profits, so they have to cut costs on hardware

dustyData@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 13:31 collapse

You mean to say that the accidentally bendy phone is better than the actually foldable phone? Or that the accidentally bendy tablet is better than the tablet that is almost 20% larger, equally thin but somehow doesn’t bend?

KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Jun 15:23 collapse

Really? We going to ignore the accidentally not allowed on planes because they can explode phone?

dustyData@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 20:18 collapse

Of course, as we know no Apple device has ever caught on fire, never.

KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Jun 23:08 collapse

Everything that uses electricity has caught fire before. It happening a handful of times is very different than being banned from planes.

miridius@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 05:59 collapse

So what you’re saying is, if you want advanced phone features sooner buy an Android, if you want to be subjected to dodgy business practices sooner buy an Apple

Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 18:11 next collapse

This has been the case for at least 11 years.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:04 collapse

Idk, I think Apple was first to do face unlock. That’s all I got…

Bgugi@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 23:36 next collapse

What about round corners?

ITGuyLevi@programming.dev on 15 Jun 23:46 collapse

I used to unlock my desktop with my face a long time ago (20 years or so)… No clue when it came to mobile devices, I could totally see Apple bringing that to mobile first.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:50 collapse

Yeah, the tech itself isn’t new. Fingerprint sensors also took a while to come to mobile, and they’ve been around for ages.

I’m also not interested in face unlock. Passwords work fine, and fingerprints are more than plenty for lazy people.

ITGuyLevi@programming.dev on 16 Jun 00:06 collapse

I wholeheartedly agree, I thought it was cool until I realized the security concerns. FDE and pass phrases only please. If only someone could convince more companies to allow proper TOTP instead of wanting you to use their proprietary authenticator.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:56 collapse

Yup, looking at you, Fidelity and Steam…

rainynight65@feddit.de on 15 Jun 20:49 next collapse

Does your Android phone get 5+ years of software support?

histic@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 15 Jun 21:03 collapse

7+ actually

rainynight65@feddit.de on 15 Jun 21:32 collapse

*from the manufacturer

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:06 collapse

Yup. My Pixel 8 gets 7+ years from Google. That’s up from 5 from the previous gen.

boonhet@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 23:48 next collapse

That’s great, but you can actually thank Apple for it as much as Google.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:59 collapse

Yeah, Apple has a good track record for software undates. I actually replaced a perfectly good phone just because it lacks updates.

Honestly, that’s why I want a Linux phone, for essentially endless updates. My old 2009 Linux PC still got updates when I eventually upgraded the hardware, and I want the same to be true of my phone. Unfortunately, Linux phones don’t meet my base requirements, but hopefully that’ll change by the time I need another.

rainynight65@feddit.de on 16 Jun 02:52 collapse

That’s the thing. Apple has that track record already. This years iOS update will be available for phones released as far back as 2017. And that’s not a recent development - 4+ years have been the norm with iOS devices for a long time, while many Android phones have suffered from much faster obsolescence.

Google have yet to prove that they can fulfill this promise.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 04:48 collapse

Idk, they’ve done pretty well with their established update cycle so far. AFAIK, Apple doesn’t announce a minimum support cycle, they just announce when devices lose support. Google announces minimum support cycle, and so far has stuck to it.

Maybe Apple is better in this regard, idk, but so far Google has kept their word with their Pixel devices, so I don’t see any reason to doubt them going forward.

rainynight65@feddit.de on 16 Jun 02:43 collapse

I’ll touch base with you in 7 years to see how that’s going.

suction@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 21:00 next collapse

Except one: be good at what it does

Ballistic_86@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 23:20 next collapse

That’s great! Competition in this space is working to improve both.

Instead of this stupid fanboy shit of Android vs iOS, we should celebrate an actual success in development.

boonhet@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 23:53 next collapse

Lifelong iOS hater who moved to iOS 2 years ago here. They’re different strokes for different folks.

If you’re like I used to be, get an Android! Flash a custom ROM on it! All the freedom is amazing.

Now I have an iPhone. It may even lack some features Android has. It gets them slower. But the experience is ridiculously polished and consistent. This is a device I can’t have fail on me.

I still use Linux on my gaming PC and one of my work laptops. I love it. I love fiddling with things. I just want my phone to be an appliance like my fridge now. I buy it and forget it for the next few years.

notannpc@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 00:11 next collapse

Sometimes I miss tinkering on my android phone, but I just get my fix handled with the homelab and keep my iPhone nice and stable. I wish it wouldn’t take lawmakers to get things like usb c and rcs, but hey still getting it done.

alekwithak@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 00:53 next collapse

My second work phone is an iPhone, so I’m a lifelong iOS hater but I’ve had a few generations of them. Let me tell you these things crash all the time, it is only slightly better at covering for itself.

Katana314@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 02:05 collapse

I’d say a good negative use case really fits in the “reliability” category. So often at work, coders expect everything to always succeed, and have no thought towards what happens if one cog ever falls out of place; but good systems can react well or even help you get to what you generally need.

SeeJayEmm@lemmy.procrastinati.org on 19 Jun 15:49 collapse

I mean, if you spent the kind of scratch on an android phone you would on an iPhone and then not fuck around with it, you’d have a similar experience on Android.

Years ago I used to flash roms and generally tinker until I decided I needed my phone to be stable and stopped. My Note 20 is polished and stable, no complaints.

My wife has always had iPhones. I’ve used both and find iOS frustrating. These days, unless you’re scraping the bottom of the barrel, it’s mostly about comfort and preference.

boonhet@lemm.ee on 19 Jun 16:00 collapse

I’ve done that once. Then I made the mistake of updating past the Android version it came with. Suddenly it was no better than most of the cheap androids I’d owned before that. It was the Oneplus 7 Pro and it just started lagging like hell 2 years in.

I’m now 2 years into my iPhone 13 mini, have also kept up with software updates and it hasn’t slowed down at all.

miridius@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 07:19 collapse

And yet still no back button, the most basic feature that iPhones sorely lack :(