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amalter | 2 years ago

It's not as "vapid" as you imagine.

As an example; =maybe you have a family/friend group chat of 8 members and you're planning a birthday party or an event. If everyone is in the ecosystem, you can seamless share notes, todo's, hi-res pictures, videos, locations, etc.

Since for whatever reason your family has no idea what Signal/Telegram/WhatsApp are - you take the one person that's not on iMessages (and so preventing the group from using the tools) out of the group and say "Make sure to update so and so on the Notes here" or something. It's a practical decision. Often, that one Android user is the only one on Signal or WhatsApp. So to share pictures, you make a group of everyone on iMessage and send the videos and album over, and then send a separate WhatsApp to that person.

And sometimes you accidentally forget to send that seperate message.

The right answer is to all agree on a fully featured messaging app (For most non-US that's WhatsApp), or for the default messaging to be upgraded.

Then you get to RCS - which Google is now pushing, after going through a dozen (or two?) of their own attempts to lock users in with a bewildering array of conflicting messaging apps.

Apple should support it, although it's a bit rich to see Google try to "shame" Apple into it only because the failed at their execution.

discuss

order

DANmode|2 years ago

> Since for whatever reason your family has no idea what Signal/Telegram/WhatsApp are

The reason is lack of interest in the details of their very important daily-use tools, instead defaulting to what they are handed.

Happens for many reasons, but none have ever been compelling enough to me to not care about what goes into my vehicle, communications, housing etc and then complain afterward that I didn't know.