40domi
About
- Banned
- Username
- 40domi
- Joined
- Visits
- 17
- Last Active
- Roles
- member
- Points
- 389
- Badges
- 0
- Posts
- 138
Reactions
-
Leader of counterfeit Apple crime ring sentenced to more than four years
-
AirPods & Apple Watch market share insight opens debate on consumer choice
This article is as laughable & under cooked as the DoJ lawsuit,
I'm shocked any iPhone user, uses anything other than Air Pods 😳 They are clearly the best in the market, should Apple make them worse to satisfy the DoJ and other manufacturers?
Samsung watch has already 40% of the market on Android and it was launched 4 years later than Apple Watch, isn't giving Samsung watches away & Samsung Pods for free (bundled with their phones) anti competitive to other blue tooth headset manufacturers, because they don't make phones?
Anyway other watches work with iPhone, Samsung & Google have purposely made their watches incompatible with iPhone ! -
Apple may not release its own generative chatbot in iOS 18
mattinoz said:Apple doesn't do toys - if they use Generative AI it will be to make tasks happen for the customer. Not just spew a wall of text with buzzwords that align to a topic with no factual regard for the topic.
After all, that is what a Chatbot do currently, which is why they are loved by marketing and teams.
It doesn't seem like it is worth Apple's while to try and get to that next benchmark, but there would be a lot of value in helping developers leverage that work to get there.
Developer tools in AI rumours make sense for Apple. Any feature that is customer-facing will not be branded AI outside of bullet point on a slide with maybe a nice graphic.
All of the AI features on the Pixel & Samsung are just novelties or just don't work very well.
Examples;
Pixel best take (in theory a very good feature I would like) in practice only works 50% of the time at best and it takes for ever and not very secure because it only works off devise.
Samsung web search from a photo 🤣, has anyone ever really looked at a photo and thought, I wish I could search the web from that?
Samsung AI speech translator (great in theory) but doesn't work 🤣
Android split screen, I have trouble sometimes seeing docs in my split screen on a 14" MacBook, it's impossible on a screen less than half that, which is why Apple hasn't done it!
Always on display, for years Apple resisted it and everyone moaned about it, why did Apple resist it? because of the 15/20% extra battery drain, in a world where everyone moans about the lack of battery life, what happens when Apple finally do it (probably against their better judgement) 90% of users have it turned off 🤣
There are many, many more examples, but I won't go on.
-
Apple responds to DOJ antitrust lawsuit by refuting every claim
Reading the law suit, it looks like it has been prepared by an Android fan boy. or even someone who has vested interest in the Android world, it's not based on any true facts, just click bites from the ANDROID INDUSTRY!
The fact is DoJ are trying to force Apple to adapt 3rd party technologies at the expense of privacy & security of it's own customers, rather than 3rd parties adapting to Apples technical requirements (imagine a neighbour coming into your house, telling you what you should do), as apple says there are API's for everything, what the 3rd parties want is free access to everything, (now.... that is uncompetitive in any language or law).
The only reason this law suit has been lodged, is to force Apple to provide a back door access to the DoJ and other agencies, if Apple ever agrees to that? The law suit will be dropped like a ton of bricks by the DoJ!
If it wasn't so corrupt, it would be laughable....but it's NOT 😡.
-
Apple responds to DOJ antitrust lawsuit by refuting every claim
avon b7 said:"Apple responded by stating that the claim was misleading."
So, we are to assume the claim, at its core, is correct. If it weren't, Apple would have said outright it was wrong.
"The DOJ's issue with Apple's 30% commission doesn't mention that 85% of developers don't pay any commission, and a vast majority are eligible for a reduced 15% commission. Apple's commission has been tested in court before by Epic, and Apple won on that front."
What happens in one trial isn't necessarily relevant to what can happen in another.
That 85% don't pay anything is utterly irrelevant. The point is that the remaining share is enough to generate billions upon billions in revenues because there is literally no competition allowed. Everything in that other group goes to Apple because alternative stores are not allowed to exist.
The same applies to the 'reduced' 15%' which only ever came into effect through regulatory scrutiny and complaints. Without that Apple wouldn't have conceded anything.
"However, Apple has no data that shows users desire SMS elsewhere, and it's not a feature used by popular platforms on Android"
Regardless, the point remains and far worse IMO, is how Apple hid 'SMS' within its app. I lost count of the amount of times I had to tell users that what they were sending to Android users was in fact an SMS with all its limitations. Save for a one-off message which didn't even state the words 'SMS' or anything similar, and a warning that the message could incur extra costs. The SMS app should have been separate from iMessage.
"For Apple to offer wide support for any third-party smartwatch would require the company to account for every model, operating system, and more to allow interoperability."
IMO, third party watches are crippled from the get-go by OS limitations which seem to make it necessary for an app from the watch manufacturer to be running at all times to gain a half decent functionality. It will be interesting to see what watch manufacturers say to this.
NFC.
"Apple claims these aren't anticompetitive measures but a result of how the technology is implemented to protect the user."
This is utter hogwash. The technology is implemented specifically to eliminate competition. Well, it was. It seems that within the EU that is going to change now (again, due to regulatory pressures).
Although people here are at a loss to understand the reasons behind the DMA/DSA, the US, and other markets, could well follow suit.
Here, in the EU the underlying situation is nothing new. Prior to this, the telecoms industry and the banking sector were also forced to open up with interoperability requirements to critical infrastructure that have been working well for years and more changes come to market regularly. Recently money transfers were required to become 'instant', for example.
NFC hardware/software combos (with secure enclave and TEE access) have not been an issue on phones that carry those elements. The banks wouldn't support that if security were an issue.
The reality is that an Android phone can securely support NFC/Wallet transactions from multiple vendors.
My phone can support Google Pay, Huawei Pay, BBVA Pay and even, theoretically at least, even Apple Pay. An iPhone has only supported Apple Pay, and eliminated competition by simply not allowing it to exist. That is is because there are revenues involved and Apple takes a cut from every single operation and wants the whole pie to itself.
New times require new legislation. The EU is well ahead of the pack here and an AI directive is also progressing well. Previously we had WEEE and RoHS plus the common charger initiative, the battery directive, right to repair, right to be forgotten, consumer protections etc.
I wouldn't say the case against Apple is going to be a walkover for Apple. We'll have to wait and see and perhaps what will be more interesting are the breadcrumbs of information relative to internal communications that might drop along the way.
Because your comments are as wrong & misleading as the DoJ's law suit!
The fact is DoJ are trying to force Apple to adapt 3rd party technologies at the expense of privacy & security of it's own customers, rather than 3rd parties adapting to Apples technical requirements (imagine a neighbour coming into your house, telling you what you should do), as apple says there are API's for everything, what the 3rd parties want is free access to everything, now that is uncompetitive in any language or law.
The only reason this law suit has been lodged, is to force Apple to provide a back door access to the DoJ and other agencies, if Apple ever agrees to that? The law suit will be dropped like a ton of bricks by the DoJ!
BTW, the EU are a corrupt bunch of imbeciles, doing the bidding of their Chineese pay masters.