I might be a bit cynical, but I'm guessing Apple will have some dubious technical excuse why they won't support RCS in iMessage... Watch...
I 100% agree with you...Apple will not adopt it.
You guys are missing the point - RCS will REPLACE SMS/MMS. If Apple wants a stake in the smartphone game they will HAVE to support it or their customers will have no way to communicate with others at the most basic level.
You guys are missing the point - RCS will REPLACE SMS/MMS. If Apple wants a stake in the smartphone game they will HAVE to support it or their customers will have no way to communicate with others at the most basic level.
The problem is that in order to send media or messages between devices and not deal with unreasonable compression of the media, both parties need to be on the same messenger or protocol. I send pictures between my Android and my brother's iPhone no problem, but we're both using Google's Hangouts protocol (not sure what app he's using on his phone). Apple solves this between Apple devices by using the Messages protocol. It can be argued that the resistance of Apple users to use anything else (WhatsApp, Hangouts, Allo, etc) to communicate to people outside of that walled garden is causing slow adoption of alternate protocol for this. Apple users saying "use this or you don't get high quality pictures" is just as argumentative non-iPhone people trying to force iPhone users to use an alternate protocol.
We get it, using Messages you don't have to make a choice between SMS or a data protocol. Guess what - there's a world outside Apple and everybody needs to play together if we want to have open lines of communication and sharing of media. We're sorry that our choice of device doesn't fit into Apple's way of doing things. If you want to blame an entity, blame Apple for keeping their protocol so closed for so long.
Apple and iOS meets a very plain, logical, and real need for a great many people...high quality, straight-forward devices, that, more often than not...just work. No reason to hate on that, there's nothing to be gained by doing so.couldn't agree more
Apple and iOS meets a very plain, logical, and real need for a great many people...high quality, straight-forward devices, that, more often than not...just work. No reason to hate on that, there's nothing to be gained by doing so.
Honestly most people on iPhones have never even tried Android for longer than 2-3 mins at the store. They can't even begin to appreciate it.
Do they have to though? What can't iPhone folks be happy with their iPhones?
Of course they can be, but if they haven't spent any time with any other product then they don't have license to make an informed decision on what's best. That works in both directions as well.
So I have to drive every vehicle so that I can pick the absolute best one? Let people like what they like. If it works for them, it works for them. Don't need to talk down to iPhone folks.