| I don't. This is a stark realisation that I have had over the past few years. I would once staunchly recommend iPhones for their strong security, in particular app isolation, on-device AI, and physical device security. However, over the years there have been more and more instances where Apple decides what I can do with my phone. From restricting APIs to give their first-party apps advantage, to, most recently, not having any (local) method to move voice memos off my Apple Watch. I've realised they are orchestrating their hardware and software to build a truly solid wall from within which they can extract continuous rent from their captives. I don't own my device because I cannot freely run the software I create on it (without paying Apple and gaining their approval, which is impossible in some cases). I'm done with Apple... but there are no acceptable alternatives. Android is bad in other aspects. This is not a free and fair market; it's a duopoly. I genuinely pray weekly for a phone like the Framework Laptop, where I can run my own software (Arch Linux) and repair and replace the hardware as needed. |