←back to thread

417 points nkko | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.332s | source
Show context
pixelmonkey ◴[] No.42480134[source]
This looks great. If this Python implementation of the FindMy API actually works, it would be a major technology quality-of-life improvement for me. I hope Apple lets it stay alive.

Everyone who shares location with me does so over Find My, and my family insists on using AirTags. As a 100% desktop Linux and mobile Android user, it is one of the few things that I always need to remote in to my Mac Mini to access because there are no x-platform FindMy apps and the FindMy iCloud web app does not have feature parity to the macOS and iOS apps. One of a long list of offenses where Apple refuses to make things easy for x-platform friend groups and families. Very annoying.

replies(6): >>42480401 #>>42480473 #>>42480685 #>>42480754 #>>42480805 #>>42484506 #
BeefySwain ◴[] No.42480401[source]
What does "x-platform" mean in this context?
replies(4): >>42480413 #>>42480452 #>>42480453 #>>42480469 #
pixelmonkey ◴[] No.42480469[source]
Cross-platform. There are 3 major desktop operating systems (Windows, Linux, and Mac) and 2 major mobile operating systems (iPhone and Android). Every single OS has a huge marketshare worldwide (including Linux, if you count servers).

A truly x-platform app is one that works well on all 5 of these platforms, e.g. Signal. A moderately x-platform app is one that works well on the two mobile operating systems and on web as an alternative to desktop, e.g. WhatsApp. A single-platform app, like Apple FindMy, only works properly on e.g. Mac + iPhone. Apple tends to be the only major industry player that produces these sorts of apps, e.g. iMessage, FaceTime, Final Cut Pro, Keynote. Although with Keynote you can often get by with the iCloud web version, which has a useful 80%-or-so of the desktop app's features. Even apps like Meet, Zoom, and Teams -- run by rival companies -- are more x-platform than major Apple apps.

replies(2): >>42480780 #>>42484233 #
bolognafairy ◴[] No.42484233[source]
Linux is not a “major desktop operating system”. Let’s be intellectually honest here, particularly because you’re using the number “3” to bolster your argument that Apple is being negligent or unfair or whatever. Be annoyed at Apple for not ‘supporting Android’ or whatever all you want, but let’s not pretend that Apple isn’t paying a very justifiable amount of attention to desktop Linux. What next, iCloud.com doesn’t load properly in Lynx?
replies(1): >>42484662 #
1. MacsHeadroom ◴[] No.42484662[source]
Estimates from earlier this year are over 60 Million Linux powered desktop PCs globally.

That's not a huge portion of total market share but is still major by some measure.