the urge to buy an iPhone resurfaces
gonna keep coping online instead of actually doing it though
probably
@alicela1n I do hear this
I hear bad things too
but I'm starting to at least see the potential value in finding out for myself
especially now third party app stores are a thing
@cas there is the problem of it being a walled garden, but for me personally it is everything I need from a phone, I'm kinda in Apple's ecosystem right now, and I stick with it because I prefer it over Android, and these days Android is getting more and more locked down as well
@craftyguy vendor lock-in for what? im locked-in to Google services, YouTube, and mastodon and those are all available I think
@alicela1n what things do you find restrictive in that sense?
@cas the backgrounding APIs on iOS don't allow for services like Syncthing to function properly, there is an annoying limitation where you can only use one VPN at a time, and Apple doesn't allow third party apps to use JIT, sideloading is gated behind a $99/year development certificate and Apple doesn't really want you doing it anyway
@cas Apple pushes iphone users to use/depend on services that aren't accessible outside the Apple "ecosystem", like ichat. I guess if you can avoid them... 🤷
@cas it is at least worth buying one to study the user experience on imo
@cas i also wondered if an iPhone was for me, but honestly i don't think i need to buy one and support apple just to try it out. in the meantime, a fairphone saves the ecosystem and guarantees you longevity
@cas I thought a while back about switching to an iPhone, but I believe that would be a huge downgrade from de-googled Android as It's vendor locked as hell.
While I dislike Android (and would love to go back to Sailfish OS) I still firmly believe It seems to be the best from both evil worlds. If I were on iOS I would not be able to write my own apps from any Linux system, use Termux natively without any emulation layer, continue using 3rd party YT clients such as Newpipe and Grayjay.
@craftyguy @cas One thing to watch out for: The instant you activate a SIM card on an iPhone, it will advertise your phone number as an iMessage address to every Apple user who has your number in their contacts. The only way to avoid this is to disable iMessage and FaceTime completely on the device.
@alex @craftyguy @cas I'm sorry to understand but what's the issue on this? They already have your number.
@vixalientoots @alex @cas see what I said earlier about Apple pushing users to use their proprietary walled garden