• Re: apple had 8 of 10 best selling phones in 2022

    From Andy Burnelli@21:1/5 to Chris on Fri Mar 10 15:36:31 2023
    XPost: misc.phone.mobile.iphone, comp.sys.mac.advocacy

    Chris wrote:

    I think I have an idea what I'm talking about. I use iPhones since 2008
    and Nexus/Pixels since 2016. Android phones despite being cheaper they
    are a waste of money for a Mac-user. BTW: I use Macs since 2005.

    I'm pleased for you.

    Your experience isn't the same mine: as a Mac user I was perfectly capable
    of also using an Android phone.

    Hi Chris,

    This is intended to be an adult discourse based on the two quotes above.

    While Joerg only regurgitates what he was fed by Apple to believe, I own
    both platforms and use both daily where the main DIFFERENCES between the platforms are in the walled garden and in crippled functionality.

    Other than that, like Chris astutely assessed, anyone with any normal intelligence can easily use the two platforms to do the main things.
    a. Communicate via cell & messaging
    b. Interact with the Internet via browsers & other apps

    Where iOS excels over Android, IMHO, is _inside_ the walled garden, e.g.,
    when interacting with Apple product lines, although Android, with some
    effort, can be made to interact with Apple products (not as easily though).

    *That's just an honest assessment of fact.*

    Where Android excels over iOS, IMHO, is that you can do anything you want
    to do with it because Google allows apps that Apple won't allow (such as
    fake GPS mock location spoofing or automatic call recorders or Wi-Fi and cellular graphical signal strength debugging tools, etc.).

    *That's just an honest assessment of fact.*

    Where Android also excels over iOS, IMHO, is you can even do things that
    you want to do but which Google does not allow on their app store (such as
    FOSS YouTube clients, and FOSS Google Play Store clients, and FOSS mail
    user agents which don't create a mothership account on the device, and FOSS system-wide on-device firewalls which also perform ad blocking, etc.).

    *That's just an honest assessment of fact.*

    In summary, if you remain completely inside the walled garden, then iOS
    devices work better (in some ways) than do Android and Windows/Linux; but
    if you stray out side the walled garden, then the only place iOS works as
    well as Android is in communication (phone & messaging); but nowhere else.
    --
    Posted out of the goodness of my heart to disseminate useful information
    which, in this case, is to respond to Joerg's and Chris' specific comments.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)