this post was submitted on 15 Nov 2023
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Nearly 9 in 10 US teenagers use an iPhone, spelling disaster for Google's mobile future

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[–] MudMan@kbin.social 7 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (1 children)

I don't know what RCS even is.

We all just use Whatsapp here, both on iPhone and Android. If you bought an iPhone for some reason and tried to text people through iMessage you'd get laughed out of the room.

Also, holy crap, how long has it been since you looked at the Play Store? Is that narrative about Android still running in the US? I legitimately hadn't heard that one in years.

[–] vanderbilt 2 points 11 months ago (1 children)

It's gotten better over the years, but the stats don't lie. Play Store has higher incidence of shady apps or outright malware. Some of this is due to their policies, some of it because of how Android apps work. And I work in information security, so I'm quite familiar with the state of things. RCS was proposed as a replacement for SMS, to correct some deficiencies and modernize it overall. In the US, it ended up getting fragmented due to carrier differences and Google tacking on patents and licensing encumbrances that harmed adoption. In the EU yeah, everyone just uses 3rd party platforms, so it's not a problem there.

[–] MudMan@kbin.social 2 points 11 months ago (2 children)

The ecosystem is very different and there's definitely a more open platform on Google's side still, but the perception that Play is catching up to the iPhone App Store has not been a thing around here for ages. I mean, discovery is borked across the board on both at this point, and breaking out with new content through placement is a nonstarter.

And hell no, nobody uses "third party platforms". They use the Play Store. Nobody is in Samsung or Amazon's weirdo alternatives. Those are not a thing, except for the five apps Samsung insists on making you update that way for some reason. It's Play or nothing. If you're developing phone apps and you're not on the Play Store you're dead. I haven't spoken to a mobile developer that was targeting anything but the App Story and the Play Store... ever.

I thought I knew how that worked in the US, but maybe you're talking about something different here.

[–] vanderbilt 2 points 11 months ago (1 children)

3rd party platforms as in messaging services, not apps stores.

[–] MudMan@kbin.social 3 points 11 months ago

Ah, got it. I thought you were still talking about the Play Store there. It's telling that I didn't even categorize Whatsapp that way instinctively, though.

I think maybe because I also don't think of SMS as a "first party" thing, since it's a pre-existing standard, not an Apple or Google thing at all. In my mind SMS is a public service thing, like AM radio, and messaging is a completely different application.

It probably shows how successfully Apple appropriated it in the US, which I admit I keep forgetting.

[–] vanderbilt 1 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (1 children)

A natural consequence of more flexibility and openness is the potential for abuse. That's not a bad thing mind you. Imagine if Android was as locked down as iOS, it'd be horrible for everyone. As for which is better, eh, opinions and preferences. If the world's largest search provider could fix the searchability (lol) of their app store it would be great. Apple has a similar issue. If you're in their App Spotlight you've going to see huge amounts of traffic to your app, but for everyone else it's chopped liver. On the topic of third party, I wonder if more repos in the style of F-Droid would help. Apple is getting force fed third-party apps next year in the EU, and I'm looking forward to the benefits.

[–] MudMan@kbin.social 3 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Yeah, for sure. I was thinking less of the existence of abuse and more on the narrative of abuse. Apple had some success early on presenting itself as the only place to do serious business on mobile development because the Android alternative was a wild west of malware where you couldn't monetize or discover at all.

That narrative faded and now the perception of Android is probably closer to Windows on PC than to old Android. Yes, you can run wild, but by and large the commercial ecosystem is safe, secure and as business-friendly as the postapocalyptic tardocapitalist wasteland of mobile development gets these days, I suppose.

I am very curious to see what happens with sideloading on Apple, too. I'm guessing as little as possible, if Apple can get away with it.