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by Gigachad 1293 days ago
This kind of feeds in to the original point though. The iPhone supports the full bluetooth feature set so 3rd party headphones work fine. The AirPods are only able to do a little bit extra by having the ability to have any part of the OS changed to support them better. This is something that requires a high trust level, you could never expose this access to any 3rd party device.

So it put the AirPods on a level playing field with everyone else, we would have to cripple them because they would have to exist in the same low trust environment. Is this actually better for consumers?

2 comments

High trust level - like device drivers on any normal OS that is not unnecessarily locked down ?
Yeah, I’m very happy to use an iOS style security model over a windows model.

I certainly don’t want my 3rd party Bluetooth headphones to be loading their own kernel modules.

It depends on the size of the company doing it - i.e. on how impactful the lock-in actually is. But I feel that certainly a boundary past which not crippling such proprietary integration would be more economically harmful overall, despite the convenience.