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395 points josephcsible | 5 comments | | HN request time: 0.017s | source
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itg ◴[] No.45570037[source]
Installing any app I want outside the Play Store was the primary reason I decided to go with Android, despite most of the people I know using iPhones. If I can't do this anymore, I may as well switch and be able to use iMessage and FaceTime with them.
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1. gdulli ◴[] No.45570668[source]
Then you'd be rewarding the company that pioneered and normalized taking away these rights. The next rights you'll lose will probably originate on Apple again years before Google takes them away too.
replies(2): >>45572076 #>>45572461 #
2. rs186 ◴[] No.45572076[source]
It doesn't make any difference anyway, does it?

Then I might as well treat myself with better hardware & ecosystem.

replies(1): >>45572901 #
3. dangus ◴[] No.45572461[source]
I think this isn’t true at all, before the iPhone existed cellular carriers controlled software on consumer phones.

Remember when GPS navigation was a $5/month app that was a cellular plan addon?

replies(1): >>45572920 #
4. ethbr1 ◴[] No.45572901[source]
Better hardware, yes.

But you'll be reminded quickly how comparatively shit Apple's software is.

Aka the litany of "Oh, yeah, everyone knows that's broken but just deals with it, because there's no way to fix issues on a closed platform other than {wait for Apple}."

5. ptx ◴[] No.45572920[source]
Only phones sold by carriers were controlled by carriers. You could easily (in Europe at least) buy an unlocked phone and put in a SIM from any carrier of your choice. You could then easily install (i.e. "sideload") Java apps from anywhere you wanted, e.g. from a storage card or over Bluetooth, although some permissions were restricted unless you bought an expensive code-signing certificate.