▲ | TheDong 5 days ago | |||||||
Locked into iPhone. I want to switch to Android, but I have all the following problems: 1. iMessage, unlike whatsapp etc, does not have an android app, and some of my family uses iMessage, so I would be kicked from various group chats 2. My grandma only knows how to use facetime, so I can't talk to her unless I have an iPhone 3. My apple books I purchased can't be read on android 4. Lose access to all my apps (android shares this one) 5. I have a friend who uses airdrop to share maps and files when we go hiking without signal, and apple refuses to open up the airdrop protocol so that I can receive those from android, or an airdrop app on android 6. ... I don't have a macbook, but if I did the sreen sharing, copy+paste sharing, and iMessage-on-macos would all not work with android. It's obvious that apple has locked in a ton of stuff. Like, all other messages and file-sharing protocols except iMessage and airdrop work on android+iOS. Books I buy from google or amazon work on iOS or android. Apple is unique here. | ||||||||
▲ | gameman144 5 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Legitimately not trying to be coy, but would you consider a game like Fortnite to be an instance of "lock-in" for teenagers? For instance, a teenager might say: 1. Fortnite doesn't have an iPhone app, so if I switch to iOS I can't play with my friends 2. My friends only play Fortnite, so I can't play with them unless I play Fortnite. 3. My skins can't be used on Roblox. 4. I lose access to all my custom worlds 5. Other game engines don't work for building Fortnite custom worlds, I have to use Unreal. It feels like a certain amount of lock-in is expected just from network effects of products, no? | ||||||||
| ||||||||
▲ | EVa5I7bHFq9mnYK 5 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
And still people hate Microsoft, which never went to these lengths in protecting its turf, and love Apple. |