Apple is Working To Make It Easier To Switch From iPhone To Android Because of the EU (theverge.com) 40
Apple is preparing to allow EU-based iPhone users to uninstall its first-party Safari browser by the end of 2024 and is working on a more "user-friendly" way of transferring data "from an iPhone to a non-Apple phone" by fall 2025. From a report: That's according to a new compliance document published by the company, which outlines all the ways it's complying with the European Union's new Digital Markets Act that comes into force this week.
Other user-facing initiatives detailed in Apple's document include a "browser switching solution" to transfer data between browsers on the same device, which it plans to make available by late 2024 or early 2025. It'll also be possible to change the default navigation app on iOS by March 2025 in the EU. The document doesn't explicitly state whether any of these features will be available globally or whether they'll be exclusive to users in the EU. But many of the company's previously announced plans to comply with the DMA -- including the ability to run browser engines other than WebKit and install third-party app stores -- are only available in the bloc.
Other user-facing initiatives detailed in Apple's document include a "browser switching solution" to transfer data between browsers on the same device, which it plans to make available by late 2024 or early 2025. It'll also be possible to change the default navigation app on iOS by March 2025 in the EU. The document doesn't explicitly state whether any of these features will be available globally or whether they'll be exclusive to users in the EU. But many of the company's previously announced plans to comply with the DMA -- including the ability to run browser engines other than WebKit and install third-party app stores -- are only available in the bloc.
will safari get force reinstalled if you roam out (Score:2)
will safari get force reinstalled if you roam out of the EU?
Apple doesn't care about their users having choice (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Apple doesn't care about their users having ch (Score:1)
Re: Apple doesn't care about their users having ch (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Apple doesn't care about their users having ch (Score:4, Interesting)
It isn't about trusting data. It's all about the fact Apple forces every browser app on iOS to sue their own Safari web browser engine. You have no choice, if you have Chrome or Firefox installed, you're still using Apple's web browser technology, which they intentionally hobble to prevent web apps from competing with native apps from their App store, where Apple makes 30% of all sales. They can't make that money if web apps are capable enough to not require an app in the app store. There are many modern and standardized features that Apple simply won't implement in their Safari web browser, and they cite reasons like "security", but that's just a lie. The truth is other browsers on Android support quite a lot of functionality that Safari doesn't, and the only real reason for that is Apple's greed.
This.
I'm a long time Android user and the actual need to install specific apps (most of which are just single use web browsers to begin with) plummeted years ago. Few applications need access to things a browser cant like the accelerometer or are entirely local resources like the apps that connect to my ODBII reader. My bank has a functional website, which works a lot better than their apps. With Ublock Origin and Privacy Badger on Firefox for Android, I get a lot more control over what is displayed.
So much so, I'm taken aback when an Iphone user tells me they need to delete stuff to "make room". If I run out of space on my Android phone, I can move things like media to a USB stick. Currently I'm using 26 GB of my Nokia X30s 256 GB of storage.
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I don't really care about having a choice on what web browser to use either.
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https://www.zdnet.com/article/... [zdnet.com]
The only way to get access to these APIs is by creating a native app. Chrome has implemented them, and I can create capable web apps for android but they don't work with Safari because Apple lied and said they aren't implementing them because "security". I don't believe it, nor should anyone else. Apple is motivated by greed.
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The APIs that Apple refuses to implement are what make a lot of apps functional and without the APIs, many apps simply wouldn't be possible.
But I don't expect you to understand any of this because your head is too firmly lodged up Steve Jobs decaying ass.
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Ignorance is the shit you are wallowing in.
I strongly deny wallowing in you, ignorant shit.
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I just don't worry about this stuff.
I use what's available and don't worry about what isn't available.
All the basics seem to be covered....web browsing, navigation, email, banking, etc.
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You have no idea what's outside of the walled garden and you are too incurious to care.
When Steve Jobs said "you're holding it wrong", I'm sure you believed him.
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You're great with insults...but really, if I don't know what I am missing, that means I don't have it now. If I don't have it now, it's hard to argue that it is something I actually need.
What is it you think I am missing? What massive hole do I have in my life that needs to be filled? Name one, just ONE app, game, movie, show, song, album, etc. that I simply MUST have in my life, that I don't already have. Just ONE.
If people were more content with what they have, and spent less time worrying about "what els
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In other words, you have no intelligent rebuttal. Nice job.
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Not worse, Same (Score:1)
Windows users could still install any other browser they wanted to, but Apple simply forbids that option.
That is simply not true. On my iPad I have Chrome installed and I use that as my browser because, as you note, Safari is terrible. So Apple is no worse than Microsoft but unfortunately, they are just as bad.
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That is simply not true. On my iPad I have Chrome installed and I use that as my browser because, as you note, Safari is terrible.
Sorry to break this to you, but you've just been using a reskinned version of Safari. Apple only very recently started allowing alternate browser engines with the release of iOS 17.4, and even then, only in the EU. Source. [theverge.com]
If you're in the USA, your choice of browser is either Safari, or ditching your iOS hardware entirely for another platform.
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No, you don't have Chrome installed, what you have is a thin wrapper around the Safari browser. That's all any other browser maker is allowed to do in iOS, is wrap a Safari web view as part of a use interface. When you browser on iOS, you aren't using Google's browser engine, you're forced to use Safari whether you know it or not. This is far, far worse and more abusive than what Microsoft did. To c
Just Throw It In The Trash (Score:1)
How hard is that to show folks? Life is so complicated for the poor Luddites.
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Whose autumn are you talking about? Even in the northern hemisphere, that's a decent time range. "Fall" makes it North American autumn, which is clearer.
Of course, "fall" was a common English word for autumn, which fell out of favour sometime during the 17th or 18th centuries. You knew that, of course, didn't you?
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Easy migration (Score:2)
But we all know that Apple's main business strategy is all about locking customers in & then mi
That's very magnanimous of Apple (Score:2)
That's something I ... (Score:1)
... will never use. You'll have to pry my iphone from my dead hands.