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People always call this a market failure while willfully ignoring that whenever markets are left unchecked, this is the inevitable outcome.
Also forced them into arbitration, then refused to arbitrate the dispute.
Let’s see Paul Allen’s turntable!
<crickets>
Though if I had to guess, it’s going to be stuff like “build a shit ton of nuclear power plants, use e fuels for cars, use green hydrogen, develop fusion power, and generally do all the things that allow us to believe that we have to change absolutely nothing in our lives.”
Boost, Slide and Sync are all coming to Lemmy. Lots of other great apps, too, though - I’ve recently been using Thunder and Connect.
See, I really don’t need all those people to leave Reddit and appear over here.
I’m fine if Reddit keeps being what Reddit has become over the years, and all the angry, toxic, trolling, shit posting people stay over there as well.
I’m fine with a much smaller, much friendlier community.
I think the best case scenario for a place like this one here is of people stop thinking about Reddit at all.
It’s kind of breaking up after a long relationship: as long as you’re still thinking about what your ex is doing right now, you’re not over the relationship.
I think this place will find its groove once people will have stopped comparing features, communities, apps, etc. to how things worked or looked like on Reddit, and once people will have completely stopped caring about whatever may or may not be going on over at Reddit.
It’s not so much that iOS is confusing.
It’s more that you have to learn which things are just completely impossible to do on iOS for the single reason that Apple doesn’t want users to do those things.
On Android, things that should be possible from a technical point of view are generally possible. Might take a while to figure things out, but generally, things are achievable.
On iOS, there’s either a fairly straightforward way to do things, or there’s not even a point in trying, because Apple has locked that shit down to the point where you’ll just waste days trying to find a way, only to give up on the end.
I’ve got endless examples, from trying to move files/documents/music on, to, or from an iOS device in a non-Apple-approved way to sending media over non-Apple-approved channels to something as simple as syncing calendars in a way that Apple doesn’t like.
On Android, all of these things can be achieved in a couple of minutes.
I used to bother with jailbreaking and all that jazz - but ultimately, to me, owning a shiny Apple device isn’t worth having to deal with all the randomly imposed limitations.
I think it’s also a chicken-or-egg question:
Apple users are more willing to pay for apps. So if you’re a dev and you want to release a paid app, iOS is the platform of choice. So more devs release paid apps on iOS, so iOS becomes the platform with more paid apps. So users are more used to pay for apps. So paying for apps is normalized, so Apple users are more willing to pay for apps.
Etc. etc. etc.
Yeah, same boat here.
I absolutely love how Home Assistant can handle virtually any device or integration you throw at it, but for the time being, I’m keeping all my logic in webCoRE on Hubitat.
I love how this statement is dripping with condescension for the people who built the service he’s currently driving into the ground - all while thinking of himself as some kind of super genius.