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iphone [2024/02/14 17:20] – qlyoung | iphone [2024/08/24 22:09] (current) – [iphone] add pixel breakage date qlyoung | ||
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- | ======== iphone | + | ====== iphone ====== |
Bit of a pace change here, I don't particularly care about consumer electronics but mobile computers aka phones are an exception since for better or worse they' | Bit of a pace change here, I don't particularly care about consumer electronics but mobile computers aka phones are an exception since for better or worse they' | ||
- | After being a longtime user of Pixel devices (which pairly nicely with Google Fi cell service), the screen on my Pixel 4a broke recently (originally written: 01 July 2022). At the same time I went to Yosemite with some friends and noticed that the pictures they took with their iPhones looked a lot better than the pictures I've taken with any Android phones. I was always skeptical of iPhone' | + | After being a longtime user of Pixel devices (which pairly nicely with Google Fi cell service), the screen on my Pixel 4a broke in June 2022. At the same time I went to Yosemite with some friends and noticed that the pictures they took with their iPhones looked a lot better than the pictures I've taken with any Android phones. I was always skeptical of iPhone' |
- | ======= Preconceptions | + | ===== Preconceptions ===== |
My main hangups coming into iPhone numbered three: | My main hangups coming into iPhone numbered three: | ||
- | ====== No filesystem access | + | ==== No filesystem access ==== |
I'd vaguely heard that it is difficult to access iPhone' | I'd vaguely heard that it is difficult to access iPhone' | ||
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One other note on this; I'd heard people say "oh but iOS has the Files app now" in response to concerns of restricted filesystem access. It does indeed have a Files app, and this app is interesting. It's a surprisingly comprehensive file management app. It allows you to access select application filesystems - it seems to be limited to ones that apps choose to expose - and some other parts of the filesystem, although the parts that are exposed are clearly curated by iOS. There' | One other note on this; I'd heard people say "oh but iOS has the Files app now" in response to concerns of restricted filesystem access. It does indeed have a Files app, and this app is interesting. It's a surprisingly comprehensive file management app. It allows you to access select application filesystems - it seems to be limited to ones that apps choose to expose - and some other parts of the filesystem, although the parts that are exposed are clearly curated by iOS. There' | ||
- | ====== No webm support | + | ==== No webm support ==== |
I watch a lot of webms. For some reason - I really don't care about the justification - Apple has decided webm is not an ordained format and refuses to implement a system codec for it. | I watch a lot of webms. For some reason - I really don't care about the justification - Apple has decided webm is not an ordained format and refuses to implement a system codec for it. | ||
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Yeah, this one kind of sucks. Webms just don't load or present as file downloads instead of embedded playback in places where they'd normally embed as videos on Android. Installing VLC and opening the file in VLC works well enough to live with it, but still, this is stupid and for a company that really cares about user experience, they should just implement webms. I don't care if there' | Yeah, this one kind of sucks. Webms just don't load or present as file downloads instead of embedded playback in places where they'd normally embed as videos on Android. Installing VLC and opening the file in VLC works well enough to live with it, but still, this is stupid and for a company that really cares about user experience, they should just implement webms. I don't care if there' | ||
- | ====== Lock-in | + | ==== Lock-in ==== |
Vague concerns about being locked into the Apple ecosystem, forced to use only apps approved by Apple, integration with iCloud, etc... | Vague concerns about being locked into the Apple ecosystem, forced to use only apps approved by Apple, integration with iCloud, etc... | ||
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---- | ---- | ||
- | ====== Positives | + | ===== Positives ===== |
- | So, there are legitimate grips with iPhone. But goodness gracious, the positives. | + | Things I like. |
- | ===== UX ===== | + | ==== UX ==== |
Everyone knows this one. iPhone is famous for the UI being buttery smooth at all times. This is real. As much as I wish I didn' | Everyone knows this one. iPhone is famous for the UI being buttery smooth at all times. This is real. As much as I wish I didn' | ||
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Minor things like picture-in-picture, | Minor things like picture-in-picture, | ||
- | ===== Pictures | + | ==== Pictures ==== |
+ | When I first wrote this section after getting the phone, I wrote: | ||
+ | |||
+ | < | ||
It is just a fact that the iPhone takes amazing pictures. Through whatever combination of camera and software, pictures on the iPhone turn out consistently better than any picture I ever took with any Android flagship - and I have owned a lot, from the Nexus 5 through the Pixel 4a. Having a wide angle camera is also awesome, I use that thing all the time. | It is just a fact that the iPhone takes amazing pictures. Through whatever combination of camera and software, pictures on the iPhone turn out consistently better than any picture I ever took with any Android flagship - and I have owned a lot, from the Nexus 5 through the Pixel 4a. Having a wide angle camera is also awesome, I use that thing all the time. | ||
+ | </ | ||
- | ===== Security ===== | + | After two years of using the phone, I now hate the iPhone " |
- | I said most of what I wanted to say in the filesystem section, but yeah. The iOS security model is clearly much more mature than that of Android. I attend certain conferences and at those conferences there' | + | * oversharpen |
+ | * oversaturate | ||
+ | * apply extreme local contrast | ||
- | ===== MagSafe | + | It is possible to shoot in raw on my iPhone, but doing so doesn' |
+ | |||
+ | Here's two versions of the same photo I took of a rock wall in Colorado. I shot this using [[https:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{: | ||
+ | |||
+ | I guess the pipeline is optimized for what people want to see, but it looks awful to me. | ||
+ | |||
+ | I've also noticed that iOS takes pictures of sunsets that in real life have delicate and beautiful shades of pink and maps all of the pink tones into...orange? | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Security | ||
+ | |||
+ | I said most of what I wanted to say in the filesystem section, but yeah. The iOS security model is clearly much more mature than that of Android. At security conferences there' | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== MagSafe | ||
Wireless charging is dope, but MagSafe is the nicest system I've used out of all of them. I really like the MagSafe charger for iPhone. | Wireless charging is dope, but MagSafe is the nicest system I've used out of all of them. I really like the MagSafe charger for iPhone. | ||
- | ===== General build quality | + | ==== General build quality ==== |
- | Apple' | + | Apple' |
- | ====== Negatives ====== | + | ==== Standard support |
- | ===== The media situation | + | This one actually surprised me. iOS has deeply integrated support for standard protocols and technologies into the OS, including: |
+ | |||
+ | * CardDAV. Completely and seamlessly integrated into the OS. Configured my CardDAV server in the OS settings, contacts sync both ways. It just works. Notably it works better than the Google Contacts mess on Android. | ||
+ | * CalDAV. Again, configured in the OS, and it just works. Calendar events sync both ways. | ||
+ | * Samba. Yep. Go into the Files app, dots menu, " | ||
+ | * FTP, SFTP and I believe WebDAV work same as above. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Overall the situation here is far better than what I experienced on Android. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Negatives ===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== The media situation ==== | ||
The iPhone media library is weird. Apparently iOS has a concept of music, videos and photos being some kind of special entities above and beyond regular files. This kind of makes sense from a historical perspective; | The iPhone media library is weird. Apparently iOS has a concept of music, videos and photos being some kind of special entities above and beyond regular files. This kind of makes sense from a historical perspective; | ||
- | ===== Sharing videos ===== | + | ==== Sharing videos ===== |
+ | |||
+ | === Compression | ||
This one is bizarre. iOS heavily prioritizes the ability to share media. All of their commercials show users sharing pictures and videos. But what they don't advertise is that it is extremely difficult to share files without incurring mandatory compression. | This one is bizarre. iOS heavily prioritizes the ability to share media. All of their commercials show users sharing pictures and videos. But what they don't advertise is that it is extremely difficult to share files without incurring mandatory compression. | ||
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https:// | https:// | ||
- | ===== iCloud integration | + | === iMessage video length limitations ==== |
+ | |||
+ | iMessage is Apple' | ||
+ | |||
+ | However one thing that you cannot do is send long videos. I tried to send a 9 minute video to a friend via iMessage and received this message: | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{: | ||
+ | |||
+ | Video is too long. Note well that this does not say "Video is too big". I could understand a file size limit. But this video is 18.4mb, very small by today' | ||
+ | |||
+ | As is usually the case with looking up information on iOS online, nearly all of the explanations I found for this behavior (except [[https:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Working with large files ==== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Sharing just a few files of relatively limited size works usually works flawlessly on iOS. But what if you want to share 7gb of photos? Should work exactly the same, right? | ||
+ | |||
+ | If you try to share a large quantity of data, regardless of whether it is from the Photos app, or Files, iOS is liable to do one of the following: | ||
+ | |||
+ | 1. Nothing | ||
+ | 2. Freeze | ||
+ | |||
+ | Try it for yourself. Go into your Photos app and, as a test case, select every photo in your Recents album, and then hit the share button and see what happens. Odds are that nothing will happen. The usual share dialog will simply not appear, or it might show up after a few minutes. This is very bad UX. If you are going to fail, do it immediately. | ||
+ | |||
+ | If you try this same exercise in the Files app, you may even see it freeze. Not only does the share dialog not appear, the app actually goes unresponsive. This is a native system app built and distributed by Apple, running on Apple' | ||
+ | |||
+ | This is a recurring theme. Apple has very clearly designed iOS to be optimized for handling small files, small amounts of data, with a focus on the speed of sharing rather than the quality of the shared data. Android is a very strong winner here. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== iCloud integration ==== | ||
Fuck off, I don't want your cloud service and it shouldn' | Fuck off, I don't want your cloud service and it shouldn' | ||
- | ===== Lightning | + | ==== Lightning ==== |
This isn't a huge deal so far but I really wish it just had type c. | This isn't a huge deal so far but I really wish it just had type c. | ||
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This is absolutely irredeemable dog shit. It is unbelievable that Apple of all companies is selling computers that do not offer a 12 year old standard. If I had known this, I would not have purchased the iPhone. | This is absolutely irredeemable dog shit. It is unbelievable that Apple of all companies is selling computers that do not offer a 12 year old standard. If I had known this, I would not have purchased the iPhone. | ||
- | ===== Bluetooth | + | ==== Bluetooth ==== |
Not even Apple can get this perfect it seems. I have multiple pairs of wireless earbuds and the iPhone seems keen on connecting to as many as it possibly can. I'll be using one pair, and suddenly the audio will stop and I'll hear a faint tinny sound coming from somewhere else in my domicile, because iPhone decided to connect to a different pair of headphones and route the music over there. It's especially annoying when it happens on a VoIP call. | Not even Apple can get this perfect it seems. I have multiple pairs of wireless earbuds and the iPhone seems keen on connecting to as many as it possibly can. I'll be using one pair, and suddenly the audio will stop and I'll hear a faint tinny sound coming from somewhere else in my domicile, because iPhone decided to connect to a different pair of headphones and route the music over there. It's especially annoying when it happens on a VoIP call. | ||
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I expected more from Apple in this department, they clearly pay obsessive attention to UX, bluetooth issues are oddly out of place. | I expected more from Apple in this department, they clearly pay obsessive attention to UX, bluetooth issues are oddly out of place. | ||
- | ===== Face ID? ===== | + | ==== Face ID? ==== |
Face ID is cool. It works most of the time. The problem is that it doesn' | Face ID is cool. It works most of the time. The problem is that it doesn' | ||
- | ===== Price ===== | + | ==== Price ==== |
My iPhone 13 Mini carrier-unlocked from Apple with AppleCare+ cost $1,100. That is insane. | My iPhone 13 Mini carrier-unlocked from Apple with AppleCare+ cost $1,100. That is insane. | ||
- | ====== Mids ====== | + | ===== Mids ===== |
- | ===== Blue bubble | + | ==== Blue bubble ==== |
- | Ok, this is more of an anthropology piece than anything, but it's kind of interesting to write about anyway. Many people are very preoccupied with status symbols. Apple has created a genius status symbol in iMessage. If two iPhone users text each other, Apple automatically upgrades the conversation to use iMessage, their encrypted messaging solution. In this case the text bubbles are blue. But if an iPhone user texts a non-iPhone user, iMessage is unavailable and the connection falls back to SMS. In this case, the iPhone user sees the messages as green. | + | Ok, this is more of an anthropology piece than anything, but it's kind of interesting to write about anyway. Apple has created a genius status symbol in iMessage. If two iPhone users text each other, Apple automatically upgrades the conversation to use iMessage, their encrypted messaging solution. In this case the text bubbles are blue. But if an iPhone user texts a non-iPhone user, iMessage is unavailable and the connection falls back to SMS. In this case, the iPhone user sees the messages as green. |
- | Because iPhones are seen as the premium choice of phone among Millenials | + | Because iPhones are seen as the premium choice of phone among millenials |
- | ====== Conclusions | + | ===== Conclusions ===== |
- | I'm keeping iPhone. Overall it is MUCH more enjoyable to use than flagship Android devices, and while I have gripes with it, I've solved all of them one way or another (except for ad-free YouTube). Security is clearly much better. It's a pleasure to use because of the buttery smooth UX. Filesystem access is surprisingly good while also maintaining strong application sandboxing. The camera is by far the best mobile camera I have ever used. | + | I'm keeping iPhone. Overall it is MUCH more enjoyable to use than flagship Android devices, and while I have gripes with it, I've solved all of them one way or another (except for ad-free YouTube |
Lack of sideloading sucks and the phone is overpriced. I wish there was a company that made a good phone. | Lack of sideloading sucks and the phone is overpriced. I wish there was a company that made a good phone. | ||
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