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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)FM
Posts
2
Comments
798
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • You complain of gestures, yet, you’re silent on iOS’s shit notification system?

    I have no qualms with iOS's notifcation system. iOS handles it in app, vs android you'd have to do that in the settings, and not all apps support this. Slack for example does it in app on both iOS and Android. And Discord just doesn't do either.

    latest Pixels have been solid performers for the most part.

    The Tensor chips have been hot garbage. There's a reason I haven't upgraded my Android phone to one of those. I won't complain about this pixel performing on par with an iPhone 2 years older than it, and worse than my iPhone 15. But 2 fps in the camera there's something wrong. And all the stuttering since new just isn't acceptable. The difference is VERY noticeable when the phone throttles to 10fps in maps. I had to resort to underclocking in order to maintain decent performance longer term at the expense of even worse performance in day to day tasks.

  • Ok so you hate android because you couldn’t stop tinkering with it and it got unstable?

    It's unstable without tinkering with things too. Usually the OS is fine, it's the individual apps that are the problem, even the built in stuff from Google has problems. My current device isn't even some shitty Samsung or Motorola phone, it's a Pixel 4. What's supposed to be the gold standard.

    You must the only one who is actually benefiting from apples anti-consumer practices.

    Is preventing users from rooting their phone doing stupid shit and breaking their phone really anti consumer? Anti enthusiast? Yes. Anti consumer? Not so much. And it's not like you can even do that on all Android phones.

  • The UI and UX overall are so much nicer on iOS. Especially with gestures, Android's gesture system is half baked at best.

    Sure you can't rice your phone, but I don't want to rice my phone. With Android I'm tempted to do stupid shit to my phone because I could, which then causes the phone to be unstable or just not work at all and I have to wipe and reload. With iOS that's not an option, and honestly I've grown past that shit. When Cyanogenmod died all interest I had left in Android died with it. And over the years I've found out I wasn't alone. Root is great, but have you ever just had a phone that works?

    Even when I don't do stupid shit I've experienced so many bugs. My camera for example runs at 2fps on my Pixel 4, and I can't figure out why. UI and UX for apps aren't as rigidly followed on Android to the experience is a lot less consistent (insert Apple not following their own guidelines meme). And honestly I run into so many more bugs in various apps on Android. In the past year I've had maybe 5 app crashes on iOS using it as my main phone. On my Android phone I've had at least twice that + at least one full phone crash.

    Also the SOCs available on Android phones are garbage. I haven't looked much into the SD 8 gen2/gen3, but I honestly doubt they'd be as efficient as Apple's silicon + deep hardware software tie in. (insert iPhone 15 overheating).

  • This change doesn't do anything that you couldn't do before. It's just a prompt forcing you to pick an option before you can access the web vs just having safari and needing to find an alternative. It's the same story as on a PC in Windows.

    I use it because I'm tired of Androids shit. I have both an Android phone and an iPhone and I only use the android phone for things that I cannot do on the iPhone. And if I wasn't a massive computer nerd I'd just forgo the second phone entirely.

  • The only thing new is that the first time it prompts you to pick which app to pick as your default (and installs it). Only the prompt is new, manually installing something and making it default has been an option for a while.

  • How old is your machine? If it's new enough to run windows 11 then it probably also supports modern standby (aka S0 standby). When plugged in during "sleep" it's actually on, and should be doing the updates for you.

    That said my work laptop only gets used during work hours and it almost always gets it's updates done while I'm doing stuff throughout the day, and it just needs a quick reboot to finish.