msgodel 3 days ago

I think it's already starting. Apple can't produce anything people just have to have anymore because of the attitude that's causing this. You can see this in their sales numbers.

  • freeone3000 3 days ago

    I am completely uninterested to going back to the privacy-stealing, ad-infested nightmare that is Android. Besides, what would I even gain? iOS 25 just got live translation in calls and item extraction from screen (not just photos). So what am I missing?

    • bloppe 2 days ago

      I would never defend Android, but the idea that iOS is somehow better is pretty funny to me

      • freeone3000 2 days ago

        There’s a Weather widget. It doesn’t have ads. There’s a podcast app. It doesn’t have ads. There’s an RSS app. I paid $7.99 for it, once. It doesn’t have ads.

        The entire Android ecosystem is built around people not paying for anything ever, where the iOS ecosystem, people pay for things. And honestly, it’s a way nicer experience.

    • msgodel 3 days ago

      I think you should read and/or think more carefully.

  • achierius 3 days ago

    This seems unrelated to your original thesis though, no?

  • layer8 3 days ago

    People “have to have” an iPhone because it’s a status symbol. Not sure how AI is going to change that.

    • zdragnar 3 days ago

      My brother's family and my parents all have iPhones and apple devices because the whole apple ecosystem Just Works for them, especially sharing pictures. They're far from tech saavy, and telling them to "just install this on your phone and this on your computer and this other thing on your other computer" is a non-starter.

      None of them actually care that they are Apple products or iWhatevers. Most couldn't tell you what the difference is between what they use and windows or android. They just know to go to the apple store to get things that work for them.

    • msgodel 3 days ago

      So was the Blackberry. Better radios and mobile SOCs absolutely changed that.

      Mathias Wandel (an ex Blackberry engineer) has a neat video where he explains exactly how that happened and the attitudes are strikingly similar to the ones today.