• BlinkerFluid@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    It took a lot of work and effort to migrate my ex’s photos off of her iphone and onto an actual hard drive. They funnel the average person into their cloud services with proprietary file extensions, low storage space, the asinine problem of having to have the phone open and unlocked for files to transfer to third party apps, thanks Nextcloud on IOS, and cheap introductory fees.

    • Danny@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’m literally helping my wife with this as we speak. The 1000 photo at a time limit to download from iCloud is pathetic! Google’s solution is SO much better.

      Side note - You mentioned Nextcloud… If you’re self hosting, take a look at Immich. It’s a self-hosted Google Photos clone with Android and iOS apps that has very active development and is insanely quick at loading large photo libraries/thumbnails (unlike Nextcloud).

    • Pancit Canton@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      For casuals with Windows computer, they can install iCloud, and sync and make them available for offline use on their computers. This is basically like any popular cloud services out there except Google, that has Takekout

  • Clipboards@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My only takeaway from this article is that Google could be doing so much more. I wish we had anything close to WWDC in terms of fanfare behind new features & functionality

  • clearlyathrowawai@aussie.zone
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    1 year ago

    Recently made the move wholesale from IOS/iPhone Mini/iPad to a Galaxy Fold 4. Wasn’t hard at all tbh, plenty of tools for migration since most stuff is cloud-based. Took maybe a day to settle in. I’m fortunate in that I’m not dependant on icloud and the like though, my password manager is bitwarden, etc.

    This is after starting on iPhones about a decade ago in high school. First android was trivial to get used to. I think the “myth” of apple lock-in keeps way more people in the apple ecosystem than lock-in itself.

  • Mike@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    There are some good points here, but as commenters on the post have noted, you can achieve a similar level of ecosystem integration with Samsung devices. I have an S23U and a Tab S8, and they’re beautifully integrated.

    It’s true that Apple has a much faster cadence of adding clever or exciting new features, but I can’t remember the last one that took up a rent-free lease in my head.

    Really, I’m my own worst enemy with some of the stuff. I prefer Android over iOS, but I prefer MacOS over Windows. So, because I have a macbook, I’m missing out on the deeper integration Windows and Android users get.

    That said, I’ve used Windows Phone Link on a work computer, and feels a lot clunkier than the way my old iPhone integrated with my Macbook. Hell, it doesn’t even support RCS. That is just egregious.

  • quortez@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Um.

    I may browsing this thread from kbin, but I’m pretty sure it’s not supposed to show anything weird like this right?