Discussion:
Why is iOS so popular in U.S. of A.??
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Daniel65
2024-03-22 09:33:19 UTC
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Permalink
Cross-posted to a Linux and a Win7 Newsgroup ... I don't have an iOS
newsgroup.

"US launches landmark lawsuit against Apple"

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-22/us-launches-landmark-lawsuit-against-apple/103620506

Whilst listening to the Radio (in Australia) discussing this story this
afternoon, the point was made that, on Phones, Apple's iOS has something
like a 60% market share in the U.S. of A.

However, on a Worldwide basis .....

https://www.statista.com/statistics/272698/global-market-share-held-by-mobile-operating-systems-since-2009/

Quote "Android maintained its position as the leading mobile operating
system worldwide in the fourth quarter of 2023 with a market share of
70.1 percent. Android's closest rival, Apple's iOS, had a market share
of 29.2 percent during the same period." End Quote

Why is there such a drastic difference between 'With-in U.S. of A.'
stats and 'Worldwide' stats?? i.e. almost an inversion!
--
Daniel
Jeff Gaines
2024-03-22 10:08:48 UTC
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Permalink
Post by Daniel65
Cross-posted to a Linux and a Win7 Newsgroup ... I don't have an iOS
newsgroup.
"US launches landmark lawsuit against Apple"
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-22/us-launches-landmark-lawsuit-against-apple/103620506
Whilst listening to the Radio (in Australia) discussing this story this
afternoon, the point was made that, on Phones, Apple's iOS has something
like a 60% market share in the U.S. of A.
However, on a Worldwide basis .....
https://www.statista.com/statistics/272698/global-market-share-held-by-mobile-operating-systems-since-2009/
Quote "Android maintained its position as the leading mobile operating
system worldwide in the fourth quarter of 2023 with a market share of 70.1
percent. Android's closest rival, Apple's iOS, had a market share of 29.2
percent during the same period." End Quote
Why is there such a drastic difference between 'With-in U.S. of A.' stats
and 'Worldwide' stats?? i.e. almost an inversion!
Americans are naively patriotic and many of them don't understand there
are other countries in the world. There is a story that at the first
lesson of trainee airline pilots in the US about 14% (on average) of the
trainees have to be taken to a mental hospital to recover when they are
told there are other countries in the world they will need to fly to.
--
Jeff Gaines Dorset UK
Those are my principles – and if you don’t like them, well, I have
others.
(Groucho Marx)
Daniel65
2024-03-22 12:35:25 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Jeff Gaines
Post by Daniel65
Cross-posted to a Linux and a Win7 Newsgroup ... I don't have an
iOS newsgroup.
"US launches landmark lawsuit against Apple"
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-22/us-launches-landmark-lawsuit-against-apple/103620506
Whilst listening to the Radio (in Australia) discussing this story
this afternoon, the point was made that, on Phones, Apple's iOS
has something like a 60% market share in the U.S. of A.
However, on a Worldwide basis .....
https://www.statista.com/statistics/272698/global-market-share-held-by-mobile-operating-systems-since-2009/
Quote "Android maintained its position as the leading mobile
operating system worldwide in the fourth quarter of 2023 with a
market share of 70.1 percent. Android's closest rival, Apple's iOS,
had a market share of 29.2 percent during the same period." End
Quote
Why is there such a drastic difference between 'With-in U.S. of A.'
stats and 'Worldwide' stats?? i.e. almost an inversion!
Americans are naively patriotic and many of them don't understand
there are other countries in the world.
Yeap ... and, as I understand it, to some U.S.A.'ians only 'the lower 48
states' count .... but I expect the vast majority of Apple iOS phones
are produced elsewhere (China/Taiwan/Mexico/where-ever) just like the
other phones so, to me, that still doesn't explain the situation.
Post by Jeff Gaines
There is a story that at the first lesson of trainee airline pilots
in the US about 14% (on average) of the trainees have to be taken to
a mental hospital to recover when they are told there are other
countries in the world they will need to fly to.
Could that suggest there is a problem with U.S. of A. schooling
(Geography) even at what, as I understand it, they called the Elementary
School level??
--
Daniel
Newyana2
2024-03-22 12:16:14 UTC
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Permalink
"Daniel65" <***@nomail.afraid.org> wrote

| Whilst listening to the Radio (in Australia) discussing this story this
| afternoon, the point was made that, on Phones, Apple's iOS has something
| like a 60% market share in the U.S. of A.
|

It may be true. But those stats are from statcounter. So
it's really a record of what cellphone is used by people who visit
commercial websites with statcounter tracking and don't block
it.

Apple devotees are less likely to care about privacy, more
likely to be wealthy. That may account for part of the stats.
(I've been blocking statcounter in my HOSTS file for as long
as I can remember. Do extensions like ublock origin block it?
I don't know.)

Apple's own disciple-run website says the US share is in the
30s and generally going down:
https://9to5mac.com/2023/10/18/apples-us-smartphone-market-share-39-percent/

Where do they get their stats? I don't know. Maybe they're
counting sales, rather than cellphones visiting statcounter
websites? I don't see anyplace where they even explain their
numbers! Then again, AppleSeeds don't care. They just want
to hear that their religion is growing.

It's become common knowledge in the US that iPhone text
messages show as blue bubbles whereas if an Android sends a
text to an iPhone it's green. Ick! Gross ick factor!

Apple blocks efforts to change the bubble color because they
want to promote Apple as a status symbol. Similarly, they
deliberately interfere with anything that might mean an AppleSeed
being able to interact with non-Apple products.

On dating sites, a green bubble is often enough to disqualify
someone from consideration -- like a young man who picks up
his date in a rusted Ford Fiesta. Who wants to date an icky
Android prole?

US culture tends to be very status-conscious. People spend
big money for iPhones, BMWs, etc. The more alienated people
become, the more the person is the logos. Many people walk
around festooned with logos, on their coats, shoes, shirts,
handbags, glasses... Apple have always
pushed a "premium brand" image. People don't mind paying
through the nose. Just as with BMW, it's not so much the product
per se as it is the logo that they buy.

On the other hand, Apple does make solid products. Their products
are also relatively easy to use by people with little tech aptitude.
They're stable, dependable, beautifully built, and soprt iconss that
look like they were designed by a 12 year old girl who dots her
i's with hearts. Cute as a button and fancy as a BMW.

And as the US lawsuit indicates, Apple are vicious in their competitive,
monopolistic practices and their exploitation of both customers
and the virtual slave labor force that produces their products. So
their tech-illiterate customers are reasonable in thinking that nothing
but Mac works well. Because if it's not Mac then it doesn't work
well on a Mac.

Flaky GenZ moralists won't buy a brand if the CEO has said something
critical of "trans" people, but they'll happily share the CEO "cancel
gossip"
on their slave-built iPhone. That's a big part of the Apple mystery.
How do they manage to maintain an image as a cute company,
year after year, while arguably being one of the nastiest companies
to ever exist?

The other mystery is why it's taken over two decades for law
enforcement to look into Apple's practices. There's no secret
there. Yet suddenly everyone's worked up. Perhaps it's because
no one cared about consumer protection, but they do care if
Epic Games, PayPal and various other corporate entities that are
suffering lost profits? And why aren't they looking into Google's similar
exploitive practices? Why is it impossible to simply buy a
cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't
force me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets
I can drive to.
Daniel65
2024-03-22 12:58:32 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Daniel65
Whilst listening to the Radio (in Australia) discussing this story
this afternoon, the point was made that, on Phones, Apple's iOS has
something like a 60% market share in the U.S. of A.
It may be true. But those stats are from statcounter. So it's really
a record of what cellphone is used by people who visit commercial
websites with statcounter tracking and don't block it.
o are you suggesting this might be a case of "Lies, Damned Lies and
Statistics!!"??
Apple devotees are less likely to care about privacy, more likely to
be wealthy. That may account for part of the stats. (I've been
blocking statcounter in my HOSTS file for as long as I can remember.
Do extensions like ublock origin block it? I don't know.)
Apple's own disciple-run website says the US share is in the 30s and
https://9to5mac.com/2023/10/18/apples-us-smartphone-market-share-39-percent/
Where do they get their stats? I don't know. Maybe they're counting
sales, rather than cellphones visiting statcounter websites? I don't
see anyplace where they even explain their numbers! Then again,
AppleSeeds don't care. They just want to hear that their religion is
growing.
It's become common knowledge in the US that iPhone text messages show
as blue bubbles whereas if an Android sends a text to an iPhone it's
green. Ick! Gross ick factor!
Could this, possibly lead to messages from Android Phones (no Blue tick)
being delayed in their 'reception' (i.e. time to being displayed) in iOS
type phones??
Apple blocks efforts to change the bubble color because they want to
promote Apple as a status symbol. Similarly, they deliberately
interfere with anything that might mean an AppleSeed being able to
interact with non-Apple products.
On dating sites, a green bubble is often enough to disqualify someone
from consideration -- like a young man who picks up his date in a
rusted Ford Fiesta. Who wants to date an icky Android prole?
US culture tends to be very status-conscious. People spend big money
for iPhones, BMWs, etc. The more alienated people become, the more
the person is the logos. Many people walk around festooned with
logos, on their coats, shoes, shirts, handbags, glasses... Apple have
always pushed a "premium brand" image. People don't mind paying
through the nose. Just as with BMW, it's not so much the product per
se as it is the logo that they buy.
So the Customer is paying to do the advertising for whichever company!!
On the other hand, Apple does make solid products. Their products are
also relatively easy to use by people with little tech aptitude.
They're stable, dependable, beautifully built, and soprt iconss that
look like they were designed by a 12 year old girl who dots her i's
with hearts. Cute as a button and fancy as a BMW.
And as the US lawsuit indicates, Apple are vicious in their
competitive, monopolistic practices and their exploitation of both
customers and the virtual slave labor force that produces their
products. So their tech-illiterate customers are reasonable in
thinking that nothing but Mac works well. Because if it's not Mac
then it doesn't work well on a Mac.
Flaky GenZ moralists won't buy a brand if the CEO has said something
critical of "trans" people, but they'll happily share the CEO
"cancel gossip" on their slave-built iPhone. That's a big part of the
Apple mystery. How do they manage to maintain an image as a cute
company, year after year, while arguably being one of the nastiest
companies to ever exist?
The other mystery is why it's taken over two decades for law
enforcement to look into Apple's practices. There's no secret there.
Yet suddenly everyone's worked up. Perhaps it's because no one cared
about consumer protection, but they do care if Epic Games, PayPal and
various other corporate entities that are suffering lost profits? And
why aren't they looking into Google's similar exploitive practices?
Why is it impossible to simply buy a cellphone that's not controlled
by the OS provider? My TV doesn't force me to watch CBS TV. My car
doesn't limit the supermarkets I can drive to.
Whilst reading your reply, Newyana2, I was reminded of IBM back in the
80's/90's where virtually any Interrogated Circuit producing Company was
permitted, by IBM, to produce CPU chips up through to the 486 variety
.... but then, having achieved CPU Supremacy, IBM virtually shut the
gates .... unless the other Manufacturers were willing to pay!!
--
Daniel
Newyana2
2024-03-22 14:49:11 UTC
Reply
Permalink
"Daniel65" <***@nomail.afraid.org> wrote

| > It's become common knowledge in the US that iPhone text messages show
| > as blue bubbles whereas if an Android sends a text to an iPhone it's
| > green. Ick! Gross ick factor!
|
| Could this, possibly lead to messages from Android Phones (no Blue tick)
| being delayed in their 'reception' (i.e. time to being displayed) in iOS
| type phones??
|

I don't know about lag time. From what I've read it's just the
green color issue. Someone made an app to make the messages
show blue on iPhones, but Apple made sure to break it.
andal
2024-03-22 14:42:56 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Newyana2
| Whilst listening to the Radio (in Australia) discussing this story
this | afternoon, the point was made that, on Phones, Apple's iOS has
something | like a 60% market share in the U.S. of A.
|
It may be true. But those stats are from statcounter. So
it's really a record of what cellphone is used by people who visit
commercial websites with statcounter tracking and don't block it.
Apple devotees are less likely to care about privacy, more
likely to be wealthy. That may account for part of the stats.
(I've been blocking statcounter in my HOSTS file for as long as I can
remember. Do extensions like ublock origin block it?
I don't know.)
Apple's own disciple-run website says the US share is in the
https://9to5mac.com/2023/10/18/apples-us-smartphone-market-share-39-
percent/
Post by Newyana2
Where do they get their stats? I don't know. Maybe they're
counting sales, rather than cellphones visiting statcounter websites? I
don't see anyplace where they even explain their numbers! Then again,
AppleSeeds don't care. They just want to hear that their religion is
growing.
It's become common knowledge in the US that iPhone text
messages show as blue bubbles whereas if an Android sends a text to an
iPhone it's green. Ick! Gross ick factor!
Apple blocks efforts to change the bubble color because they
want to promote Apple as a status symbol. Similarly, they deliberately
interfere with anything that might mean an AppleSeed being able to
interact with non-Apple products.
On dating sites, a green bubble is often enough to disqualify
someone from consideration -- like a young man who picks up his date in
a rusted Ford Fiesta. Who wants to date an icky Android prole?
US culture tends to be very status-conscious. People spend
big money for iPhones, BMWs, etc. The more alienated people become, the
more the person is the logos. Many people walk around festooned with
logos, on their coats, shoes, shirts,
handbags, glasses... Apple have always pushed a "premium brand" image.
People don't mind paying through the nose. Just as with BMW, it's not so
much the product per se as it is the logo that they buy.
On the other hand, Apple does make solid products. Their products
are also relatively easy to use by people with little tech aptitude.
They're stable, dependable, beautifully built, and soprt iconss that
look like they were designed by a 12 year old girl who dots her i's with
hearts. Cute as a button and fancy as a BMW.
And as the US lawsuit indicates, Apple are vicious in their
competitive,
monopolistic practices and their exploitation of both customers and the
virtual slave labor force that produces their products. So their
tech-illiterate customers are reasonable in thinking that nothing but
Mac works well. Because if it's not Mac then it doesn't work well on a
Mac.
Flaky GenZ moralists won't buy a brand if the CEO has said something
critical of "trans" people, but they'll happily share the CEO "cancel
gossip"
on their slave-built iPhone. That's a big part of the Apple mystery.
How do they manage to maintain an image as a cute company,
year after year, while arguably being one of the nastiest companies to
ever exist?
The other mystery is why it's taken over two decades for law
enforcement to look into Apple's practices. There's no secret there. Yet
suddenly everyone's worked up. Perhaps it's because no one cared about
consumer protection, but they do care if Epic Games, PayPal and various
other corporate entities that are suffering lost profits? And why aren't
they looking into Google's similar exploitive practices? Why is it
impossible to simply buy a cellphone that's not controlled by the OS
provider? My TV doesn't force me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit
the supermarkets I can drive to.
Here it is

Stupid people do tend to spend a lots of money for a crap that
covers/hides theirs poverty and real social status.
--
Painters, electricians, comedians, journalists, rule the world.
Frank Slootweg
2024-03-22 15:48:41 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Newyana2 <***@invalid.nospam> wrote:
[...]
Post by Newyana2
Why is it impossible to simply buy a
cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't
force me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets
I can drive to.
As said - also to you - before, it's perfectly possible to buy a
'cellphone' (read: mobile phone) where you - not the phone/'OS' supplier
- are in charge, but a *smart*phone indeed not so much.
andal
2024-03-22 18:21:15 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Frank Slootweg
[...]
Post by Newyana2
Why is it impossible to simply buy a
cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't force
me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets I can drive
to.
As said - also to you - before, it's perfectly possible to buy a
'cellphone' (read: mobile phone) where you - not the phone/'OS' supplier
- are in charge, but a *smart*phone indeed not so much.
get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
--
Painters, electricians, comedians, journalists, rule the world.
candycanearter07
2024-03-23 05:10:05 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by andal
Post by Frank Slootweg
[...]
Post by Newyana2
Why is it impossible to simply buy a
cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't force
me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets I can drive
to.
As said - also to you - before, it's perfectly possible to buy a
'cellphone' (read: mobile phone) where you - not the phone/'OS' supplier
- are in charge, but a *smart*phone indeed not so much.
get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
Does that exist?
--
user <candycane> is generated from /dev/urandom
jjb
2024-03-23 11:38:15 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by candycanearter07
Post by andal
Post by Frank Slootweg
[...]
Post by Newyana2
Why is it impossible to simply buy a
cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't force
me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets I can drive
to.
As said - also to you - before, it's perfectly possible to buy a
'cellphone' (read: mobile phone) where you - not the phone/'OS' supplier
- are in charge, but a *smart*phone indeed not so much.
get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
Does that exist?
Not a Linux phone, but a phone with several likable properties:
- No google stuff (except what you yourself later add);
- User repairable;
- At least 5 years OS updates.
Not so good:
- for the price there exist more advanced smartphones.
Indifferent:
- Not for sale in the US (as far as I know).

See:
https://murena.com/shop/smartphones/brand-new/murena-fairphone-5/
David W. Hodgins
2024-03-23 05:57:20 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by candycanearter07
Post by andal
get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
Does that exist?
https://itsfoss.com/linux-phones/

Regards, Dave Hodgins
andal
2024-03-23 18:18:55 UTC
Reply
Permalink
On Sat, 23 Mar 2024 01:10:05 -0400, candycanearter07
Post by candycanearter07
Post by andal
get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
Does that exist?
https://itsfoss.com/linux-phones/
Regards, Dave Hodgins
some people need just a toy that can be used as a phone

then complain when one of the "wheel" falls off :)
--
Painters, electricians, comedians, journalists, rule the world.
candycanearter07
2024-03-24 14:50:04 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by David W. Hodgins
Post by candycanearter07
Post by andal
get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
Does that exist?
https://itsfoss.com/linux-phones/
Regards, Dave Hodgins
Awesome, I might look at getting one.
--
user <candycane> is generated from /dev/urandom
Joerg Walther
2024-03-24 15:30:32 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by candycanearter07
Post by David W. Hodgins
https://itsfoss.com/linux-phones/
Awesome, I might look at getting one.
Read the comments under the article, mostly negative, for a reason.

-jw-
--
And now for something completely different...
candycanearter07
2024-03-24 17:00:02 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Joerg Walther
Post by candycanearter07
Post by David W. Hodgins
https://itsfoss.com/linux-phones/
Awesome, I might look at getting one.
Read the comments under the article, mostly negative, for a reason.
-jw-
Oh.
--
user <candycane> is generated from /dev/urandom
Simon
2024-03-26 12:30:52 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Joerg Walther
Post by candycanearter07
Post by David W. Hodgins
https://itsfoss.com/linux-phones/
Awesome, I might look at getting one.
Read the comments under the article, mostly negative, for a reason.
-jw-
You can buy a phone compatible with LineageOS and install that
https://lineageos.org/
--
Simon

RLU: 222126
John Hasler
2024-03-24 15:44:15 UTC
Reply
Permalink
I have a Pinephone. It has never worked.
--
John Hasler
***@sugarbit.com
Dancing Horse Hill
Elmwood, WI USA
andal
2024-03-23 18:15:46 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by candycanearter07
Post by andal
Post by Frank Slootweg
[...]
Post by Newyana2
Why is it impossible to simply buy a
cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't
force me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets I can
drive to.
As said - also to you - before, it's perfectly possible to buy a
'cellphone' (read: mobile phone) where you - not the phone/'OS'
supplier - are in charge, but a *smart*phone indeed not so much.
get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
Does that exist?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_open-source_mobile_phones
--
Painters, electricians, comedians, journalists, rule the world.
bad sector
2024-05-21 11:26:43 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by andal
Post by candycanearter07
Post by andal
Post by Frank Slootweg
[...]
Post by Newyana2
Why is it impossible to simply buy a
cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't
force me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets I can
drive to.
As said - also to you - before, it's perfectly possible to buy a
'cellphone' (read: mobile phone) where you - not the phone/'OS'
supplier - are in charge, but a *smart*phone indeed not so much.
get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
Does that exist?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_open-source_mobile_phones
Thanks, that's quite a list but it's all chinese to me at this point;
which ones give mortal 'non-developers' a chance to make meaningful use of?
--
Anonymity is the sole reliable witness of real society, be the image
good or bad, and of free speech, two things without which the truth
cannot be known but the intent of those opposing them can.
Bud Frede
2024-05-25 13:02:04 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by bad sector
Post by andal
Post by candycanearter07
Post by andal
Post by Frank Slootweg
[...]
Post by Newyana2
Why is it impossible to simply buy a
cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't
force me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets I can
drive to.
As said - also to you - before, it's perfectly possible to buy a
'cellphone' (read: mobile phone) where you - not the phone/'OS'
supplier - are in charge, but a *smart*phone indeed not so much.
get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
Does that exist?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_open-source_mobile_phones
Thanks, that's quite a list but it's all chinese to me at this point;
which ones give mortal 'non-developers' a chance to make meaningful use of?
GrapheneOS might be a good place to start if you want Android that's
less Google and more privacy-preserving than what you get with most
stock Android phones.

Newyana2
2024-03-23 13:24:12 UTC
Reply
Permalink
"andal" <***@andal.org> wrote

| >> Why is it impossible to simply buy a
| >> cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't force
| >> me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets I can drive
| >> to.

| get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
|

That might work for a small population of geeks. For me, it's
just not worth the trouble to work out the details. For the
average person it's not feasible at all. Personally I'd go further and
say that the culture of geek arrogance makes things worse,
as it becomes a mark of geek status to do things like run a
jailbroken cellphone. The issue is much bigger: Jailed cellphones
need to be illegal. Anyone should be able to buy a clean cellphone
and sign up with any service provider, with clearly delineated
fees.

(At one point some years ago I went to 4 different stores:
ATT, Verizon, T-Mobile, and one other that used to exist. Each
one told me service started at $40. Not one of them would tell
me the reall price. Though one woman who was there to pay
her bill was nice enought to show me: she was paying about $80.)


Slashdot ran an interesting piece today, linking to the DOJ
lawsuit against Apple: https://www.justice.gov/opa/media/1344546/dl?inline
The suit explains that sleazy licensing deals, limitations set
by phone services, and Apple's deliberate blocking of interactibility,
have left only Apple, Samsung and Google as serious cellphone
makers. Microsoft, Amazon, HTC and others had to drop out
because they couldn't get market share. It's like the old days
before the Bell breakup, when people had no choice but to rent
landline phones and pay steep rates for service. Except that the
current scenario is more complicated and more difficult to
understand. So not only would it be nearly impossible for a Mac
user to use a Linux cellphone. It would likely be unrealistic for
them to even use an Android cellphone. And for a current iPhone
user to switch would be even harder.

I actually have an LTC Tracfone that cost $40. I don't know
how they can afford to sell the screen for $40. Yet it's a very
slick, handheld computer that works for web browsing. I imagine
the camera doesn't match an iPhone or Samsung camera. I haven't
used it, so I don't know. But my Tracfone is still heavily infested
with Googlism. I've managed to block or remove most of it, though
every time I turn it on I get a flurry of messages telling me that
I simply must enable Google Play Store, or Google Services, or some
such. All of that should be prosecuted for monopoly control. Google
have no business running their spyware/crapware on my private
cellphone.
Frank Slootweg
2024-03-23 14:07:02 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Newyana2
| >> Why is it impossible to simply buy a
| >> cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't force
| >> me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets I can drive
| >> to.
| get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
That might work for a small population of geeks. For me, it's
just not worth the trouble to work out the details. For the
average person it's not feasible at all. Personally I'd go further and
say that the culture of geek arrogance makes things worse,
as it becomes a mark of geek status to do things like run a
jailbroken cellphone. The issue is much bigger: Jailed cellphones
need to be illegal. Anyone should be able to buy a clean cellphone
and sign up with any service provider, with clearly delineated
fees.
It's not a 'jailed' mobile phone, but a (network) *locked* mobile
phone. That seems to be a US-ism, because most countries just have
unlocked phones which can use any SIM for any provider.

[...]
Post by Newyana2
Slashdot ran an interesting piece today, linking to the DOJ
lawsuit against Apple: https://www.justice.gov/opa/media/1344546/dl?inline
The suit explains that sleazy licensing deals, limitations set
by phone services, and Apple's deliberate blocking of interactibility,
have left only Apple, Samsung and Google as serious cellphone
makers. Microsoft, Amazon, HTC and others had to drop out
because they couldn't get market share.
Probably another US-ism. In other countries, there are many, many
other brands. In our country - The Netherlands - Google phones weren't
even sold until not too long ago.

[...]
Post by Newyana2
I actually have an LTC Tracfone that cost $40. I don't know
how they can afford to sell the screen for $40. Yet it's a very
slick, handheld computer that works for web browsing. I imagine
the camera doesn't match an iPhone or Samsung camera. I haven't
used it, so I don't know. But my Tracfone is still heavily infested
with Googlism. I've managed to block or remove most of it, though
every time I turn it on I get a flurry of messages telling me that
I simply must enable Google Play Store, or Google Services, or some
such. All of that should be prosecuted for monopoly control. Google
have no business running their spyware/crapware on my private
cellphone.
You can keep on killfiling me - at least that's what I assume you do -
and ignoring/snipping my text when it's quoted by others - in this case
"andal" - to whom you respond, but just face it, you've bought the wrong
type of phone - for you - and now you keep on whingeing about everything
that's 'wrong' with it.

You *should* have bought a 'dumb'/feature'/'flip'/<whatever> phone,
but you *did* buy a smartphone.
Dan Purgert
2024-03-25 11:13:45 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by Newyana2
| >> Why is it impossible to simply buy a
| >> cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't force
| >> me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets I can drive
| >> to.
| get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
That might work for a small population of geeks. For me, it's
just not worth the trouble to work out the details. For the
average person it's not feasible at all. Personally I'd go further and
say that the culture of geek arrogance makes things worse,
as it becomes a mark of geek status to do things like run a
jailbroken cellphone. The issue is much bigger: Jailed cellphones
need to be illegal. Anyone should be able to buy a clean cellphone
and sign up with any service provider, with clearly delineated
fees.
It's not a 'jailed' mobile phone, but a (network) *locked* mobile
phone. That seems to be a US-ism, because most countries just have
unlocked phones which can use any SIM for any provider.
There are two routes one can use to buy a phone here in the states:

1. Buy Carrier-Agnostic phone for $PRICE (I dunno, let's say $500),
from any number of retailers.
2. Get Carrier-Locked "free(tm)" phone, that's paid off in 24
installments as part of the phone bill.

If you take route #2, the phone is (should be) unlocked from that
carrier upon final payment to them (end of your contract) OR upon
request during the contract (but you have to pay the remaining balance o
the phone).
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by Newyana2
[...]
The suit explains that sleazy licensing deals, limitations set
by phone services, and Apple's deliberate blocking of interactibility,
have left only Apple, Samsung and Google as serious cellphone
makers. Microsoft, Amazon, HTC and others had to drop out
because they couldn't get market share.
Probably another US-ism. In other countries, there are many, many
other brands. In our country - The Netherlands - Google phones weren't
even sold until not too long ago.
There are a number of brands that're only selling "Cellphones" rather
than "smartphones".

Less than there used to be, but that probably comes from the hegemony of
Apple/Samsung/Google(nee Motorola) and people generally being dumb (I
have the best "camera" or whatever ... battery life? nah, that thing
dies in 6 hours of goofing around...)
--
|_|O|_|
|_|_|O| Github: https://github.com/dpurgert
|O|O|O| PGP: DDAB 23FB 19FA 7D85 1CC1 E067 6D65 70E5 4CE7 2860
Newyana2
2024-03-25 13:31:21 UTC
Reply
Permalink
"Dan Purgert" <***@djph.net> wrote

| > It's not a 'jailed' mobile phone, but a (network) *locked* mobile
| > phone. That seems to be a US-ism, because most countries just have
| > unlocked phones which can use any SIM for any provider.
|
| There are two routes one can use to buy a phone here in the states:
|
| 1. Buy Carrier-Agnostic phone for $PRICE (I dunno, let's say $500),
| from any number of retailers.
| 2. Get Carrier-Locked "free(tm)" phone, that's paid off in 24
| installments as part of the phone bill.
|
| If you take route #2, the phone is (should be) unlocked from that
| carrier upon final payment to them (end of your contract) OR upon
| request during the contract (but you have to pay the remaining balance o
| the phone).
|

I think there's a confusion here with hardware vs carrier vs OS.
For any but extreme geeks, the OS is locked spyware. That's what
I'm primarily talking about as "jailed". I can't eliminate all of the
Google processes on my Android computer phone. Yet I never chose
to deal with Google. I bought a phone and get service from Tracfone.
The typical use of "jailbroken" that I've heard is with computer
phones locked into Apple's app source.

From what I can see, both Apple and Google are locking people
into their spyware services and app stores. That's largely what the
recent US lawsuit against Apple is about:
https://www.justice.gov/opa/media/1344546/dl?inline

Apple are more forceful than Google, but the average person is
going through their services, regardless of which phone
they buy.

Deals with carriers, incompatibilities with SIM cards, hidden junk fees,
and so on are an additional complication. All of that is a big problem,
but it's not part of the basic lock-in by the OS from either Google or
Apple.

This is a problem that's getting worse, not better. Microsoft see
what Apple gets away with and now they also want part of the action.
We used to have hardware that we buy and software that we license.
Increasingly we have what's effectively rental of kiosk devices that
control what can be done and spy on every action. Even cars are headed
in that direction, as well as, of course, doorbells. By saying the device
incorporates coyrighted software, the companies can call on the DMCA
to justify lockdown, spyware and rental. How long before we effectively
have to rent all devices and have only kiosk-style access to their
functionality?

https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/privacynotincluded/articles/its-official-cars-are-the-worst-product-category-we-have-ever-reviewed-for-privacy/

One side aspect of that is what Tim Berners-Lee has described as
"silos" -- functionalty extending across domains by single entities.
For instance, Android computer phone, Google search, gmail, Google
Wallet, "sync" services, etc. Many people can't afford to even consider
leaving Google. Apple is the same. Which likely accounts partially
for the growing popularity of iPhones: People switched to Macs to
avoid malware. Once they do that, an iPhone makes sense.
Incompatibility and lock-in make silo living an obvious choice. The
particular genius of Google and Apple is to herd their customers into
the abattoir by making it a frictionless choice. Any other option
requires climbing the fence to get out of the abattoir chute.
andal
2024-03-25 16:15:01 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Newyana2
| > It's not a 'jailed' mobile phone, but a (network) *locked* mobile
| > phone. That seems to be a US-ism, because most countries just have |
Post by Frank Slootweg
unlocked phones which can use any SIM for any provider.
|
|
| 1. Buy Carrier-Agnostic phone for $PRICE (I dunno, let's say $500),
| from any number of retailers.
| 2. Get Carrier-Locked "free(tm)" phone, that's paid off in 24 |
installments as part of the phone bill.
|
| If you take route #2, the phone is (should be) unlocked from that |
carrier upon final payment to them (end of your contract) OR upon |
request during the contract (but you have to pay the remaining balance o
| the phone).
|
I think there's a confusion here with hardware vs carrier vs OS.
For any but extreme geeks, the OS is locked spyware. That's what I'm
primarily talking about as "jailed". I can't eliminate all of the Google
processes on my Android computer phone. Yet I never chose to deal with
Google. I bought a phone and get service from Tracfone.
The typical use of "jailbroken" that I've heard is with computer phones
locked into Apple's app source.
From what I can see, both Apple and Google are locking people
into their spyware services and app stores. That's largely what the
https://www.justice.gov/opa/media/1344546/dl?inline
Apple are more forceful than Google, but the average person is
going through their services, regardless of which phone they buy.
Deals with carriers, incompatibilities with SIM cards, hidden junk fees,
and so on are an additional complication. All of that is a big problem,
but it's not part of the basic lock-in by the OS from either Google or
Apple.
This is a problem that's getting worse, not better. Microsoft see
what Apple gets away with and now they also want part of the action.
We used to have hardware that we buy and software that we license.
Increasingly we have what's effectively rental of kiosk devices that
control what can be done and spy on every action. Even cars are headed
in that direction, as well as, of course, doorbells. By saying the
device incorporates coyrighted software, the companies can call on the
DMCA to justify lockdown, spyware and rental. How long before we
effectively have to rent all devices and have only kiosk-style access to
their functionality?
https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/privacynotincluded/articles/its-
official-cars-are-the-worst-product-category-we-have-ever-reviewed-for-
privacy/
Post by Newyana2
One side aspect of that is what Tim Berners-Lee has described as
"silos" -- functionalty extending across domains by single entities.
For instance, Android computer phone, Google search, gmail, Google
Wallet, "sync" services, etc. Many people can't afford to even consider
leaving Google. Apple is the same. Which likely accounts partially for
the growing popularity of iPhones: People switched to Macs to avoid
malware. Once they do that, an iPhone makes sense.
Incompatibility and lock-in make silo living an obvious choice. The
particular genius of Google and Apple is to herd their customers into
the abattoir by making it a frictionless choice. Any other option
requires climbing the fence to get out of the abattoir chute.
the less freedom the better

stupid people are easier to govern

that is what my gov says

welcome to animal planet
--
Painters, electricians, comedians, journalists, rule the world.
J. P. Gilliver
2024-03-25 17:12:49 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Newyana2
| > It's not a 'jailed' mobile phone, but a (network) *locked* mobile
| > phone. That seems to be a US-ism, because most countries just have
| > unlocked phones which can use any SIM for any provider.
|
|
| 1. Buy Carrier-Agnostic phone for $PRICE (I dunno, let's say $500),
| from any number of retailers.
| 2. Get Carrier-Locked "free(tm)" phone, that's paid off in 24
| installments as part of the phone bill.
Presumably you _could_ do route #1 and get credit from someone other
than the carrier or OS provider (bank loan, credit card, ...).
Post by Newyana2
|
| If you take route #2, the phone is (should be) unlocked from that
| carrier upon final payment to them (end of your contract) OR upon
| request during the contract (but you have to pay the remaining balance o
| the phone).
|
So it isn't "free" really. I presume from your description that they
conceal what part of the monthly payment is paying off the 'phone, and
what part is for the service provision. (I _think_ our [UK and EU]
legislators clamped down on that.)
Post by Newyana2
I think there's a confusion here with hardware vs carrier vs OS.
For any but extreme geeks, the OS is locked spyware. That's what
I'm primarily talking about as "jailed". I can't eliminate all of the
Google processes on my Android computer phone. Yet I never chose
to deal with Google. I bought a phone and get service from Tracfone.
Though I don't think you actually pay anything to Google, apart from the
part of the 'phone purchase price that is for the OS, same as part of a
Windows computer purchase price is the Windows licence. (Yes, I know you
can buy Windows separately, but most people don't - certainly don't _do_
that, and probably don't _know_ that.)
Post by Newyana2
The typical use of "jailbroken" that I've heard is with computer
phones locked into Apple's app source.
From what I can see, both Apple and Google are locking people
into their spyware services and app stores. That's largely what the
https://www.justice.gov/opa/media/1344546/dl?inline
Apple are more forceful than Google, but the average person is
going through their services, regardless of which phone
they buy.
Indeed - UK is similarly mostly iOS and Android for 'phones, though I
don't think the Apple share is as high (less than half, I think). Other
'phone OSs have minimal shares.
Post by Newyana2
Deals with carriers, incompatibilities with SIM cards, hidden junk fees,
and so on are an additional complication. All of that is a big problem,
but it's not part of the basic lock-in by the OS from either Google or
Apple.
This is a problem that's getting worse, not better. Microsoft see
what Apple gets away with and now they also want part of the action.
We used to have hardware that we buy and software that we license.
I used to have hardware that I buy and software that I buy as well. OK,
I didn't buy absolute ownership of the software - that would of course
cost millions - but the right to use it; maybe that's what you mean by
licence, but I meant right to use it indefinitely, not any sort of
agreement that had to be renewed (sometimes it was tied to the hardware,
which was fair enough as long as that was clear). These days "licence"
often means for a limited period.
Post by Newyana2
Increasingly we have what's effectively rental of kiosk devices that
control what can be done and spy on every action. Even cars are headed
in that direction, as well as, of course, doorbells. By saying the device
incorporates coyrighted software, the companies can call on the DMCA
to justify lockdown, spyware and rental. How long before we effectively
have to rent all devices and have only kiosk-style access to their
functionality?
Not long, I fear. If I buy a new car, I'd want to find and disconnect
(except when _I_ want to use it) the cellular connection, but I'm not
sure if they've managed to make doing that illegal.
[]
Post by Newyana2
particular genius of Google and Apple is to herd their customers into
the abattoir by making it a frictionless choice. Any other option
requires climbing the fence to get out of the abattoir chute.
(first part at least)
--
J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)***@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

By most scientific estimates sustained, useful fusion is ten years in
the future - and will be ten years in the future for the next fifty
years or more. - "Hamadryad", ~2016-4-4
Newyana2
2024-03-25 18:13:48 UTC
Reply
Permalink
"J. P. Gilliver" <***@255soft.uk> wrote

| > This is a problem that's getting worse, not better. Microsoft see
| >what Apple gets away with and now they also want part of the action.
| >We used to have hardware that we buy and software that we license.
|
| I used to have hardware that I buy and software that I buy as well. OK,
| I didn't buy absolute ownership of the software - that would of course
| cost millions - but the right to use it; maybe that's what you mean by
| licence, but I meant right to use it indefinitely, not any sort of
| agreement that had to be renewed (sometimes it was tied to the hardware,
| which was fair enough as long as that was clear). These days "licence"
| often means for a limited period.
|

Yes. That's the rental trend. Software is sold as copyrighted
material. So it's like a book. You have a right to do as you like
with your copy, so long as you don't distribute copies. Although
companies like Microsoft have exploited the situation to link
Windows to hardware, while others have exploited the situation
to copy software to multiple computers. No easy solution that's
entirely fair.

There's been an issue with US libraries where publishers want them
to have to buy new e-books every x number of checkouts. They make
a good point that e-books don't wear out like books do. On the other
hand, there's a great deal of money saved by not having to print
e-books, yet they typically charge about 50% of book price. Again,
neither side is really willing to find a fair compromise.

I think the software rental idea really came about because software
was getting mature. For many years people would buy new computers
and software regularly. It made sense. 300 MHz was much slower than
400 MHz, ans Photoshop 4 was primitive compared to PS5. But gradually
the technology matured and people just didn't need to upgrade so often.
Where we used to pay for image viewers and WinZip, now it's mostly
free. So companies had to do something. Companies like Adobe and
Microsoft (MS Office) were facing losses. Customers were no longer
anxxious to see the next version of their product.

So rental is the answer. MS are clearly trying to do the same with
Windows, but it's not really working. So they're taking a different
approach of trying to show ads and sell "premium content". Their
new crap trinket, Copilot, is typical. They're forcing it on people and
then advertising that a more functional version is available for $20/month.
If they could just get one hit with a product like that they'd have a
whole new industry....

Interestingly, I just read that MS are planning
to offer real MS Office software again. Though I haven't seen anything
about pricing, or whether it might just be a UWP/Metro trinket. I don't
know what their thinking is. Is O365 failing? Are businesses unwilling
to rent?

| Not long, I fear. If I buy a new car, I'd want to find and disconnect
| (except when _I_ want to use it) the cellular connection, but I'm not
| sure if they've managed to make doing that illegal.

That's a good question. The technology and politics are
moving fast. In the US people are outraged that insurance
companies are jacking up rates based on spying. So where
will that go? Historically it's mostly a case of exploitation through
obscurity. If people have to be experts to avoid spying then the
rare outliers don't matter. Most people will be exploitable. I have
seen details about some cars online, but so far it's hard to find
clear facts. So how many people will tear apart their dhasboard
or back seat to remove a transmitter? And what if that makes the
lights stop working?
J. P. Gilliver
2024-03-25 18:47:27 UTC
Reply
Permalink
[]
Post by Newyana2
| licence, but I meant right to use it indefinitely, not any sort of
| agreement that had to be renewed (sometimes it was tied to the hardware,
| which was fair enough as long as that was clear). These days "licence"
| often means for a limited period.
|
Yes. That's the rental trend. Software is sold as copyrighted
material. So it's like a book. You have a right to do as you like
with your copy, so long as you don't distribute copies. Although
Indeed, used to be the case.
Post by Newyana2
companies like Microsoft have exploited the situation to link
Windows to hardware, while others have exploited the situation
to copy software to multiple computers. No easy solution that's
entirely fair.
I had sympathy with them, and accepted the hardware tie, when Windows up
to 98SE (maybe Me) had no copy protection, so people were pirating
rather than buying. Activation, hardware tie-in, etc., aren't nice, but
we've only ourselves to blame for them being necessary. (Actually I
_have_ bought all my MS products, but some may be OEM copies bought with
a mouse, or similar.)
Post by Newyana2
There's been an issue with US libraries where publishers want them
to have to buy new e-books every x number of checkouts. They make
a good point that e-books don't wear out like books do. On the other
hand, there's a great deal of money saved by not having to print
e-books, yet they typically charge about 50% of book price. Again,
neither side is really willing to find a fair compromise.
Good example.
Post by Newyana2
I think the software rental idea really came about because software
was getting mature. For many years people would buy new computers
and software regularly. It made sense. 300 MHz was much slower than
400 MHz, ans Photoshop 4 was primitive compared to PS5. But gradually
the technology matured and people just didn't need to upgrade so often.
Yes, not so much the speed, but the features. But as you say, it
matured: for me roughly a couple of decades ago, I reached a point where
I had all the software I needed, i. e. new versions didn't offer me
anything I actually wanted. (And also, needed more hardware.) OK, that's
a _slight_ exaggeration, but _major_ upgrades - e. g. to Word/Office,
let alone Windows itself - genuinely didn't seem to offer me anything I
wanted.
Post by Newyana2
Where we used to pay for image viewers and WinZip, now it's mostly
free. So companies had to do something. Companies like Adobe and
Microsoft (MS Office) were facing losses. Customers were no longer
anxxious to see the next version of their product.
So rental is the answer. MS are clearly trying to do the same with
Windows, but it's not really working. So they're taking a different
approach of trying to show ads and sell "premium content". Their
I'm fine with 7, and (I think more because of a hosts file than
ad-blockers) I rarely see ad.s. Except on YouTube - where, although they
irritate me, I accept them as the price I pay for getting what I
consider an excellent resource for "free".
Post by Newyana2
new crap trinket, Copilot, is typical. They're forcing it on people and
then advertising that a more functional version is available for $20/month.
If they could just get one hit with a product like that they'd have a
whole new industry....
I've not heard of that one.
Post by Newyana2
Interestingly, I just read that MS are planning
to offer real MS Office software again. Though I haven't seen anything
about pricing, or whether it might just be a UWP/Metro trinket. I don't
know what their thinking is. Is O365 failing? Are businesses unwilling
to rent?
Interesting question! Though I thought businesses were the ones keeping
MS going (that and new-machine Windows licences) by paying
support/maintenance fees (because it's easier and possibly cheaper to do
so).
Post by Newyana2
| Not long, I fear. If I buy a new car, I'd want to find and disconnect
| (except when _I_ want to use it) the cellular connection, but I'm not
| sure if they've managed to make doing that illegal.
That's a good question. The technology and politics are
moving fast. In the US people are outraged that insurance
companies are jacking up rates based on spying. So where
will that go? Historically it's mostly a case of exploitation through
obscurity. If people have to be experts to avoid spying then the
rare outliers don't matter. Most people will be exploitable. I have
seen details about some cars online, but so far it's hard to find
clear facts. So how many people will tear apart their dhasboard
or back seat to remove a transmitter? And what if that makes the
lights stop working?
That's how, I think, they'll manage it, rather than legislation (though
they'll cow [and/or bribe] legislators too if they can): they'll stop
things working if not online, at least at intervals. I would _hope_ the
EC (and hopefully UK) will push against that, but ...
I foresee a premium growing on Model Ts ... (-: [or at least 1960s-'80s
cars.]
--
J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)***@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

"Bother," said Pooh, as Windows crashed into piglet.
bad sector
2024-03-25 20:56:59 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Newyana2
There's been an issue with US libraries where publishers want them
to have sinfect!to buy new e-books every x number of checkouts. They make
a good point that e-books don't wear out like books do. On the other
hand, there's a great deal of money saved by not having to print
e-books, yet they typically charge about 50% of book price. Again,
neither side is really willing to find a fair compromise.
x-post snipped

Cap intellectual property rights to 3 years, the message being that if
you are not at all willing to ever share freely with humanity then maybe
you should keep your idea to yourself. Someone WILL nonetheless come
along with the same idea in a more social tone of voice because being
human just is that way. Years ago I took out a then available $100
'provisional' patent which was good for one year giving me 12 months to
formalize or abandon. On abandoning the idea went public-domain, and
that's exactly what I had paid $100 for, to protect a registered
published innovation as public domain for ever pucking the idea-stealing
scum that otherwise WOULD have ended up owning MY idea (see the mp3
story). Now that idea comes up as public domain on every search and
there's nothing that can be done about it. This was neither my first nor
my only patent but the past had been a faithful tutor. Little wonder
they did away with provisional-patents.
Post by Newyana2
So rental is the answer. MS are clearly trying to do the same with
Windows, but it's not really working. So they're taking a different
approach of trying to show ads and sell "premium content". Their
new crap trinket, Copilot, is typical.
Looking up 'farmers VS John-Deere' might be very educational. As another
reader pointed a software-free hardware industry is forming, once off
warranty no one can force software rental on you unless you only rented
the hardware too.
Post by Newyana2
That's a good question. The technology and politics are
moving fast. In the US people are outraged that insurance
companies are jacking up rates based on spying.
Before that was done on a voluntary basis to get lower rates, now it
will remove all risk for the insurer. My only question in that case is
why pay money if there's no risk for the insurer? Is there some natural
law that says insurers have a divine right to assured profit
continuously flowing from the tap? If it is known that I will have a
$20k claim then I can't get insured anyway, if I know that I won't then
why insure?
Daniel65
2024-03-26 09:31:27 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Newyana2 wrote on 26/3/24 5:13 am:

<Snip>
Post by Newyana2
That's a good question. The technology and politics are
moving fast. In the US people are outraged that insurance
companies are jacking up rates based on spying. So where
will that go? Historically it's mostly a case of exploitation through
obscurity. If people have to be experts to avoid spying then the
rare outliers don't matter. Most people will be exploitable. I have
seen details about some cars online, but so far it's hard to find
clear facts. So how many people will tear apart their dhasboard
or back seat to remove a transmitter? And what if that makes the
lights stop working?
And how long before 'removing the transmitter' VOIDS your Vehicle's
Warranty??
--
Daniel
Newyana2
2024-03-26 12:41:58 UTC
Reply
Permalink
"Daniel65" <***@nomail.afraid.org> wrote

|
| And how long before 'removing the transmitter' VOIDS your Vehicle's
| Warranty??

Indeed. That's one of the issues that needs to be
clarified. Are there such warranty issues with cars? A lot
of electrical appliances say the warranty is void if
you open the case. Cars are different. Removing a
camera to spy on car occupants has nothing to do
with a transmission failing early. I've done the brakes
and oil changes on my current car. I'm sure I wouldn't
be refused warranty service on that score. But it's
possible that companies will try to use such tricks.

In the past it's usually been passive control. Companies
don't want court cases. I remember reading a great
example of the premise some years ago: Companies
could put special sensors in wheel rims that check something
like an RFID tag in tires. If Toyota, say, can't confirm that
you have their special overpriced tires then they could
disable some functionality, claiming it's not safe without the
official tires. They wouldn't even have to claim DMCA infringement.
They could just give technical reasons why they can't be
sure of safety issues without confirming tire specs. Printer
companies are already doing just that and so far they haven't
been stopped.
Daniel65
2024-03-27 04:12:28 UTC
Reply
Permalink
| | And how long before 'removing the transmitter' VOIDS your
Vehicle's | Warranty??
Indeed. That's one of the issues that needs to be clarified. Are
there such warranty issues with cars? A lot of electrical appliances
say the warranty is void if you open the case. Cars are different.
Removing a camera to spy on car occupants has nothing to do with a
transmission failing early. I've done the brakes and oil changes on
my current car. I'm sure I wouldn't be refused warranty service on
that score. But it's possible that companies will try to use such
tricks.
In the past it's usually been passive control. Companies don't want
court cases. I remember reading a great example of the premise some
years ago: Companies could put special sensors in wheel rims that
check something like an RFID tag in tires. If Toyota, say, can't
confirm that you have their special overpriced tires then they could
disable some functionality, claiming it's not safe without the
official tires. They wouldn't even have to claim DMCA infringement.
They could just give technical reasons why they can't be sure of
safety issues without confirming tire specs.
Maybe after 750,000 revolutions, the tyre KNOWS it's due for a
'Rotation' (Front to Back, Left to Right) so the car lets you know ....
and lets you know ..... and lets you ................!!
Printer companies are already doing just that and so far they
haven't been stopped.
--
Daniel
bad💽sector
2024-03-27 20:06:45 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Daniel65
| | And how long before 'removing the transmitter' VOIDS your
Vehicle's | Warranty??
Indeed. That's one of the issues that needs to be clarified. Are
there such warranty issues with cars? A lot of electrical appliances
say the warranty is void if you open the case. Cars are different.
Removing a camera to spy on car occupants has nothing to do with a
transmission failing early. I've done the brakes and oil changes on
my current car. I'm sure I wouldn't be refused warranty service on
that score. But it's possible that companies will try to use such
tricks.
In the past it's usually been passive control. Companies don't want
court cases. I remember reading a great example of the premise some
years ago: Companies could put special sensors in wheel rims that
check something like an RFID tag in tires. If Toyota, say, can't
confirm that you have their special overpriced tires then they could
disable some functionality, claiming it's not safe without the
official tires. They wouldn't even have to claim DMCA infringement.
They could just give technical reasons why they can't be sure of
safety issues without confirming tire specs.
Maybe after 750,000 revolutions, the tyre KNOWS it's due for a
'Rotation' (Front to Back, Left to Right) so the car lets you know ....
and lets you know ..... and lets you ................!!
Printer companies are already doing just that and so far they
haven't been stopped.
--
Daniel
x-post snipped

Every time I tow the garbage bins out along my 3000 ft. driveway with
the seat belts off at about 10-15 km/h my 2018 Subaru honks its brains
out at me continuously. My 2008 Tundra only a few times and then it
shuts up as it should because after a few 'annunciations' it SHOULD be
obvious that I do NOT WANT to put seat-belts on. ADMINISTRATIVE
DECISIONS DO NOT BELONG TO CLERKS. Some of the einsteins in automotive
design cubicles are so pucking stupid that if I were like them I'd want
to wear my pants on my head! They should instead spend their time on
seeing to it that their *$5 chinese chips on wheels* have spring loaded
windows that open and seat-belts that automatically unlock when a car
with an entire family in it slides into water. They could also louver
headlamps to prevent them from blinding oncoming traffic. Their idiotic
'features' prevent me from jumping out of my car in the event of a
brake-failure at the top of a long downhill or from shutting all lights
off while trying to egress a x-fire zone between two warring monkey gangs.
Dan Purgert
2024-03-25 23:58:06 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by J. P. Gilliver
Post by Newyana2
| > It's not a 'jailed' mobile phone, but a (network) *locked* mobile
| > phone. That seems to be a US-ism, because most countries just have
| > unlocked phones which can use any SIM for any provider.
|
|
| 1. Buy Carrier-Agnostic phone for $PRICE (I dunno, let's say $500),
| from any number of retailers.
| 2. Get Carrier-Locked "free(tm)" phone, that's paid off in 24
| installments as part of the phone bill.
Presumably you _could_ do route #1 and get credit from someone other
than the carrier or OS provider (bank loan, credit card, ...).
Quite so -- but the issue is "the sticker says it's $500" vs "it's free*"


[*] right now; but we add $20 / month to your bill </fine-print>
Post by J. P. Gilliver
Post by Newyana2
|
| If you take route #2, the phone is (should be) unlocked from that
| carrier upon final payment to them (end of your contract) OR upon
| request during the contract (but you have to pay the remaining balance o
| the phone).
|
So it isn't "free" really. I presume from your description that they
conceal what part of the monthly payment is paying off the 'phone, and
what part is for the service provision. (I _think_ our [UK and EU]
legislators clamped down on that.)
It's in the fine print, it's always been in the fine print (it's also
broken out on your bill); but people don't read all that closely.
Historically (pre-2012 or so) there were FAR more issues with the manner
in which carriers "locked" the phones to their network (and wouldn't let
you leave, even post-contract).
--
|_|O|_|
|_|_|O| Github: https://github.com/dpurgert
|O|O|O| PGP: DDAB 23FB 19FA 7D85 1CC1 E067 6D65 70E5 4CE7 2860
J. P. Gilliver
2024-03-23 14:36:36 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Newyana2
| >> Why is it impossible to simply buy a
| >> cellphone that's not controlled by the OS provider? My TV doesn't force
| >> me to watch CBS TV. My car doesn't limit the supermarkets I can drive
| >> to.
| get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart
|
That might work for a small population of geeks. For me, it's
just not worth the trouble to work out the details. For the
average person it's not feasible at all. Personally I'd go further and
say that the culture of geek arrogance makes things worse,
as it becomes a mark of geek status to do things like run a
jailbroken cellphone. The issue is much bigger: Jailed cellphones
I agree about the Geek atmosphere - _sometimes_ it's unconscious.
Post by Newyana2
need to be illegal. Anyone should be able to buy a clean cellphone
and sign up with any service provider, with clearly delineated
fees.
Ah. Well, you're conflicting two things there - the OS, and the service
provider.

In UK, we have four network providers (may soon be three) - Vodafone,
EE, and I forget the others - and about a dozen service providers (such
as GiffGaff, and some of the supermarkets such as ASDA and Tesco): apart
from the big four, the others sell access to one of the networks, though
don't make that all that obvious. All have a confusing multitude of
plans, though most are monthly, giving a certain number of minutes,
texts, and gigabytes - these days one or two of those three are often
"unlimited" on some plans. (Very few offer true pay-as-you-go.)

Most of the 'phone shops - and sales in supermarkets - _will_ try to
sell you a 'phone that is locked to one of the providers, but will sell
you an "unlocked" one if you push them. With or without a service option
(often called a "SIM-only" contract). Most towns will have one or two
small shops which will "unlock" many locked 'phones for a fee.

As for the OS, I don't know what the percentages are, but I _think_
they're about fifty-fifty iPhone and Android - possibly somewhat more
Android, as those are considerably cheaper. But buying an Android one
_doesn't_ force you to use Google as the service provider (I don't think
they actually _offer_ service provision here).

Online: I just put "DooGee" into ebay, as that was the make my last
smartphone was: the first (I have sorted by price+P&P, so cheapest) that
came up was "DOOGEE X97 Android 12 Smartphone 16GB 4G Unlocked Mobile
Phone 4200mAh" for 30 pounds with free postage; I'm sufficiently out of
touch with smartphones that I don't know if that's good or bad, but it
doesn't sound bad. (https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/364799065569 if you're
interested, but that's probably not appropriate for US.) [It says "Helio
A22 / Quad Core / 2.0GHz / 12nm, 6.0" HD+ Display, AI Double camera
(8MP+2MP), 4200mAh Large battery, 5MP Front Camera, 3GB RAM+16GB ROM,
Android 12.0".] It says "Support nano SIM+nano SIM+TF card", which
_sounds_ like it has two SIM slots (mine had two, though they were for
different sized SIMs).

The main difference between the cheaper makes like DooGee and the more
expensive ones like Samsung is support from the manufacturer: you're
unlikely to get any updates (so for example if you bought the above one,
you'd remain on Android 12.0).
Post by Newyana2
ATT, Verizon, T-Mobile, and one other that used to exist. Each
one told me service started at $40. Not one of them would tell
me the reall price. Though one woman who was there to pay
her bill was nice enought to show me: she was paying about $80.)
Terrible. I think our (or it might have been EC) legislators clamped
down on them a few years ago, but I suspect it's still easy to be misled
as to what component of the monthly fee is service provision and what
component is hire purchase of the actual 'phone, unless you insist on
buying outright an unlocked 'phone. The stores have incentive to sell
you a 'phone on some sort of credit arrangement, as they get a kickback
from the credit provider (not necessarily either the 'phone manufacturer
or the service provider - may be a third company); as with anything,
_not_ buying on credit is cheaper, if you can afford the initial outlay.
Some "bundles" claim to offer update to the latest model at frequent
intervals, but I'm not sure if under those agreements you ever actually
own the 'phone - fine until it's stolen and you have to pay for it.
Post by Newyana2
Slashdot ran an interesting piece today, linking to the DOJ
lawsuit against Apple: https://www.justice.gov/opa/media/1344546/dl?inline
The suit explains that sleazy licensing deals, limitations set
by phone services, and Apple's deliberate blocking of interactibility,
have left only Apple, Samsung and Google as serious cellphone
makers. Microsoft, Amazon, HTC and others had to drop out
because they couldn't get market share. It's like the old days
before the Bell breakup, when people had no choice but to rent
landline phones and pay steep rates for service. Except that the
current scenario is more complicated and more difficult to
understand. So not only would it be nearly impossible for a Mac
user to use a Linux cellphone. It would likely be unrealistic for
them to even use an Android cellphone. And for a current iPhone
user to switch would be even harder.
I actually have an LTC Tracfone that cost $40. I don't know
how they can afford to sell the screen for $40. Yet it's a very
I don't know LTC - is that a service provider? If it is, and it's a
'phone that's locked to them, it may have been sold at a (slight) loss,
them expecting to recoup the loss from your service charges.
Post by Newyana2
slick, handheld computer that works for web browsing. I imagine
the camera doesn't match an iPhone or Samsung camera. I haven't
The camera in my last DooGee - though far more pixels - produced
noticeably inferior results to my (old Fuji) standalone camera. (I
notice the above one says it has a Samsung camera.)
Post by Newyana2
used it, so I don't know. But my Tracfone is still heavily infested
with Googlism. I've managed to block or remove most of it, though
every time I turn it on I get a flurry of messages telling me that
I simply must enable Google Play Store, or Google Services, or some
such. All of that should be prosecuted for monopoly control. Google
have no business running their spyware/crapware on my private
cellphone.
I agree. Though how much of that is from Google and how much from your
service provider, I'm not sure. Can you turn it on as just a computer -
i. e. not connected to either the mobile (cellular) network or wifi?
But certainly, what is 'phone manufacturer, what is OS manufacturer, and
what is service provider, should all be made - and _enforced_ by
legislation/regulation - much clearer.
--
J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)***@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

If a cluttered desk is characteristic of a cluttered mind, what does an empty
desk mean ?
Newyana2
2024-03-23 18:47:51 UTC
Reply
Permalink
"J. P. Gilliver" <***@255soft.uk> wrote

| Ah. Well, you're conflicting two things there - the OS, and the service
| provider.
|

I'm talking about 3 things: hardware maker, OS maker and service.
For example, Samsung, Google, and Verizon, or Apple, Apple and Verizon.
Google doesn't provide phone service but they do greatly control
and spy on Android cellphones. Apple does the same with iPhones.
What I'm saying is that Apple and Google should have no access to
the phones except for voluntary OS updates, or perhaps for
voluntarily loaded apps. If they want to have a "store" then let
them, but it shouldn't be forced and other stores shouldn't be
restricted. That's partly what the US lawsuit is about.

Microsoft is also gradually getting in on this model, by having
their "Windows Store" where they sell UWP/Metro crap and try to
coerce Windows users to take part. For example, they're currently
discontinuing Outlook and pushing Metro Outllook through their store.
Which is odd, given that they recently announced that they'd be
coming out with non-rental MS Office again. (Though I'm not certain
that the new Office won't just be Metro crap.)

| > I actually have an LTC Tracfone that cost $40. I don't know
| >how they can afford to sell the screen for $40. Yet it's a very
|
| I don't know LTC - is that a service provider? If it is, and it's a
| 'phone that's locked to them, it may have been sold at a (slight) loss,
| them expecting to recoup the loss from your service charges.
|

LTC is the hardware maker. Tracfone is the service provider,
which was bought by Verizon. We have a few smaller operations
like that, catering to people like me who only want minimal service.
I buy 60 minutes every 90 days, and probably use 5 of those minutes.

| >used it, so I don't know. But my Tracfone is still heavily infested
| >with Googlism. I've managed to block or remove most of it, though
| >every time I turn it on I get a flurry of messages telling me that
| >I simply must enable Google Play Store, or Google Services, or some
| >such. All of that should be prosecuted for monopoly control. Google
| >have no business running their spyware/crapware on my private
| >cellphone.
| >
| I agree. Though how much of that is from Google and how much from your
| service provider, I'm not sure. Can you turn it on as just a computer -
| i. e. not connected to either the mobile (cellular) network or wifi?

None of it is from the Tracfone service. It's all Google crap
pre-installed on Android. I go to a non-Google app provider, have
no Google account and use no Google apps or services, but
Google infests the whole OS. There are dozens of pre-installed
Google processes, many of which can't be uninstalled.

Tracfone just sells me minutes and provides the phone call
service.

I can use the phone as a computer, but there's nothing much
of value. I can also use it with wifi or cell minutes, with Firefox,
to go online. Occasionally that's useful.

With my last Tracfone it got too old. I decided to try to use it
as a portable PDF reader. That worked, but it was just too small
to be useful. I finally threw it out. There simply isn't much I can do
on a cellphone screen that's worth doing. They work OK for services.
But it's basically a services kiosk device.
Frank Slootweg
2024-03-24 12:33:39 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Newyana2
| Ah. Well, you're conflicting two things there - the OS, and the service
| provider.
I'm talking about 3 things: hardware maker, OS maker and service.
For example, Samsung, Google, and Verizon, or Apple, Apple and Verizon.
Google doesn't provide phone service but they do greatly control
and spy on Android cellphones. Apple does the same with iPhones.
What I'm saying is that Apple and Google should have no access to
the phones except for voluntary OS updates, or perhaps for
voluntarily loaded apps. If they want to have a "store" then let
them, but it shouldn't be forced and other stores shouldn't be
restricted. That's partly what the US lawsuit is about.
Yes, but the lawsuit is about Apple. For Google, you've always been
able to use other app stores (later in your post, you say so yurself).

As to updates, you get system/OS/app updates from the phone
manufacturer (Samsung in your example), some system/OS updates from
Google ("Google Play system updates" (note "system updates", they are
system updates, not updates to the Google Play System (note lower case
versus upper case first letter of "system'))) and app updates from
wherever you got the apps.

[...]
Post by Newyana2
None of it is from the Tracfone service. It's all Google crap
pre-installed on Android. I go to a non-Google app provider, have
no Google account and use no Google apps or services, but
Google infests the whole OS. There are dozens of pre-installed
Google processes, many of which can't be uninstalled.
That's not too dissimilar from Microsoft Windows on your PC. Windows
also contains all kinds of processes, services, etc. which you 'need'
and can't uninstall. You may be able to prevent some processes and
services from starting, but that's about all.

Android isn't all that different, but the point is you're used to and
familiar with the inner workings of Windows, but you know very little
about Android and are only/mostly whingeing, instead of willing to
learn. As I said in another response: You bought the wrong type of
phone, for you.

[...]
andal
2024-03-23 18:07:53 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Newyana2
All of that should be prosecuted
for monopoly control. Google have no business running their
spyware/crapware on my private cellphone.
so again, get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart and no
spyware and other crap, controll yourself or be controlled
--
Painters, electricians, comedians, journalists, rule the world.
Newyana2
2024-03-23 19:07:43 UTC
Reply
Permalink
"andal" <***@andal.org> wrote

| > All of that should be prosecuted
| > for monopoly control. Google have no business running their
| > spyware/crapware on my private cellphone.
|
| so again, get a linux cellphone and you have more then smart and no
| spyware and other crap, controll yourself or be controlled
|
Yes, I can buy a cellphone that can't run Android
apps. I could then install an Android environment on
that phone and get certified by Google to install
Android apps. Maybe I can even get a phone service
provider to give me a plan... Great.

You're talking nonsense. It's not a viable solution,
and even if it were, 99% of people couldn't manage
it. This is like the people who rave about Linux desktop.
You need to be a geek to install it and once installed,
the software is lacking. Sure, you're free of Microsoft.
But it's an idiotic answer to a problem that needs to be
solved at a much higher level, by passing laws that
kick tech companies off of private devices.

This is what I as describing above. For geeks to
answer these problems with, "Then be a geek" is less
than helpful. It's obfuscating and disingenuous.
Frank Slootweg
2024-03-22 15:59:59 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Daniel65
Cross-posted to a Linux and a Win7 Newsgroup ... I don't have an iOS
newsgroup.
There probably isn't an iOS group, but there are iPhone and iPad
groups:

misc.phone.mobile.iphone
comp.mobile.ipad

BUT, tread very carefully when (cross)posting to those groups! :-)

[...]
bad sector
2024-03-22 21:29:28 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Daniel65
Cross-posted to a Linux and a Win7 Newsgroup ... I don't have an iOS
newsgroup.
"US launches landmark lawsuit against Apple"
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-22/us-launches-landmark-lawsuit-against-apple/103620506
Whilst listening to the Radio (in Australia) discussing this story this
afternoon, the point was made that, on Phones, Apple's iOS has something
like a 60% market share in the U.S. of A.
However, on a Worldwide basis .....
https://www.statista.com/statistics/272698/global-market-share-held-by-mobile-operating-systems-since-2009/
Quote "Android maintained its position as the leading mobile operating
system worldwide in the fourth quarter of 2023 with a market share of
70.1 percent. Android's closest rival, Apple's iOS, had a market share
of 29.2 percent during the same period." End Quote
Why is there such a drastic difference between 'With-in U.S. of A.'
stats and 'Worldwide' stats?? i.e. almost an inversion!
My wife went to iPhone from Android because one of my sons had iPhone
and she wanted to face-time with her grand-daughter. I know 3 musicians
and they ALL do all their music work on Mac because everything on it
just plain works, I do mine on Linux and its'a nightmare. My phone is
Android but I hate google so much for their insistance on merging
accounts that I will NOT open a google account and so my phone is OFF
most of the time. Probably as many reasons as there are users...

windows x-post cut
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