|
|
|
|
|
by wartijn_
1610 days ago
|
|
> Generally, supporting open interoperable standards that make switching providers easy is bad for business It was one of the reasons I switched from Android to an iPhone. It's really annoying to use Android if you don't want to use Gmail and Google Calendar, while on iOS it's super easy to use a third party for email, calendar and password manager. But that's of course just an anecdote, I'm sure you're right and it in general bad for business. |
|
I've run an Android phone without any Google account at all (something that's not possible on iOS), using a combination of FDroid and Yalp to work around the lack of Play. The fact that this is possible lulls people into this idea that Google is more open, but the reality is it's pain. You're locked out of many basic phone features, notifications are flakey, many updates don't work, and once you do opt into a Google account it invades every part of your phone's experience.
At least with iOS I can sign up for a fresh empty apple account and it leaves the rest of the (admittedly limited and very locked down) phone to me.