A publication in the Wall Street Journal (paywall) has triggered controversial discussions. Partly, the arguments in the article are regularly driven through the village like the proverbial sow, so that it would actually not be worth mentioning. Specifically, it’s about statements that Android users are “mobbed” by #iMessage users in group chats. And yes, it is probably true, because there are also generally idiots in the world.
Non-iMessage users are recognizable by the green chat bubbles by the iPhone users and are probably supposed to have the ass card. Furthermore, there are of course incompatibilities, if Android users are in iMessage chats and group calls via FaceTime.
In times of x messengers, I don’t think you can argue with lazy teenagers who are not able to find a common platform for things – especially since Snapchat and #TikTok are probably more popular.
As a note, the messaging app is used for iMessage and S/MMS. The “green bubble” has always existed in the Messages app. The “blue bubbles” were introduced to distinguish between iMessages and S/MMS,
The push to be part of the blue text group was the result of decisions Apple executives made years ago that unceremoniously made iMessage one of the world’s most widely used social networks and helped cement the iPhone’s dominance among young smartphone users in the U.S., the WSJ report said.
Speak: Biste the green, biste the rag, which has just bad luck. Quasi Fortnite player in the standard skin. Sure, Apple is not a savior, but a company. Companies want to keep customers and make money. That’s no secret – especially not when it comes to iMessage.
Anyway, Google’s senior vice president for Android, Chrome, Chrome OS and Google Photos, Hiroshi Lockheimer, also responded to the WSJ’s post by saying. posted a retweetwhich was later spread by the official account of the Android project.
Apple’s iMessage bonding is a documented strategy. The use of peer pressure and bullying as a means to sell products is disingenuous for a company that considers humanity and justice a core part of its marketing. The standards exist today to fix this.
After all, one could have argued that many people have an opinion on this. Yes, Google pretends to be open to the outside world (though you should ask YouTubers what they think of Google’s algorithms) and often creates solutions that run across platforms. The big business is advertising.
At the end of the day, though, that’s people talking who have tried to establish just as many messenger services in what feels like 100 years. Things that worked were cut off by Google, the big garbage was dumped on the customer. Even today, they have x services spread across their products that you can’t use interlocked. It would be almost too easy to talk about looking for one’s own inability as the fault of others. By the way, I don’t have this opinion as part of the blue bubble, but as a person who likes and uses many Google services – who simply wants something neat to be conjured up there. Honestly: Before I would use Google’s chat junk, I would rather reach for Telegram, Threema, Signal or WhatsApp.
At the end of the day, though, I also don’t want to live in a world where whether a chat bubble is green or blue is a status symbol. But we certainly all know that there are people who might think that way. But fortunately, you don’t have to chat with them. Not me, anyway.
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