I agree. Although I think the iPhone has always been and still is the best smartphone on the market I think a lot of people are brainwashed with the ecosystem thing. Apple’s definition of ecosystem is their hardware working together seamlessly such as your iPhone>Apple Watch>iPad and Mac. True but I bet a vast majority are invested in the ecosystem as Apple defines it.
I’m not necessarily an Apple fanboy but an iPhone fanboy. I work at a world renown university. What I see on campus is the majority of people have iPhones but as as far as other hardware like a laptop or desktop it’s mostly PC’s. There are few computer labs that have Mac’s but most of the labs and offices have PC’s. Interesting that the workers and departments who are supplied smartphones for work get iPhones. Why don’t they get the hardware that’s part of the ecosystem instead of PC’s?
So I think the ecosystem thing of a family of hardware products working together is hype. And only a small % purchase and utilize the family of products because they want them to work together.
I think Apple presents something as a feature and because some people have a phone, a Mac, and iPad, etc they try it.
Because Apple makes it easy for them it's something they adopt and they become 'dependent' on it.
Since Apple has offered them a 'solution' they lock themselves in to that solution and won't or can't consider alternatives, even if the alternative happens to be a better way or process.
Sometimes that better or alternative process may require different hardware and then the mantra becomes "I'm invested in Apple's ecosystem" as the reason to not use that better process. If the process or alternative is better then a rationalization for using Apple's 'solution' kicks in.
I stopped paying attention to all this garbage when the one service Apple offered that I was interested in would not work with my Macs. In the finding of alternative solutions it became evident that while Apple's services work for their products they are not necessarily the best solution, nor the only solution. At that point Apple lost it's hold on me in that regard.
There has been nothing since the introduction of iCloud that Apple has offered as a feature that I have absolutely had to have. I came to iPhone because I liked how the iPhone 5 looked and iOS 5/6 suited me. Apple changed all that with iOS 7 and then taking black away with the 5s and then the ugly antenna lines and camera bump with the 6 series.
I've waited for them to go in a different direction and instead they doubled down with the 7, 8 and X.
Animojis do not qualify as a feature for me, nor do I wish to ever have a poop emoji on my iPhone. I'm just not interested in toilet matters.
Android has one feature I like. I can login to the Google Play store with a Mac or a PC at work, find a game for my daughter and push it to the Android crap-tablet we have at home. She gets to play a new game.
Nothing like that exists on the App store and App downloads on one device that appear on another don't count. I don't need the game I want on her device on my phone or iPad.
That's a useful 'Android ecosystem' thing for me. But Apple would rather focus on other things.
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Good! Then sell the iPad and the Mac, end of story. What were you trying to prove with your OP?
OP was trying to discuss Apple's ecosystem, not the iPhone.
He can do everything he needs on the iPhone and that does not necessarily mean having to use Apple's ecosystem or services.
Why does rejecting Apple's ecosystem have to equate with rejection of the device?
The two are seperate, as much as Apple wants people to not believe that. Therefore it is quite possible to use an iPhone or iDevice and NOT use Apple's ecosystem and services.
Hence OPs thread.
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Apple doesn’t force you to use iCloud and iMessages. In fact I only use iCloud for contacts and photos. I also use Google Photos. Actually iMessage in my opinion is the best messaging platform on the planet. Apple really nailed it with iMessage. Boggles my mind why Google can’t create a messenger similar to iMessage or they don’t care.
Perhaps because SMS is just as easy to use?
It's interesting that people complain that SMS limits you in characters…yet they then go off and send a tweet.
Tweeting with it's character limits is ok, but SMS sucks compared to iMessage?
I have no issues using SMS. I've had unlimited texting since Christmas 2008. iMessage is nice and I do use it, but like all of Apple's other services I am not tied to it.