this post was submitted on 23 Mar 2024
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Privacy
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The thing about the Apple experience is that it doesn’t only integrate well among your own devices, but also others. Being isolated from that can be pretty challenging, especially if you are the only one in the family. Unless you come up with a whole marketing concept to make the change seem attractive to other (not techy) family members, you’d be cycling uphill.
Can you be more specific?
I've heard this argument, but AFAIK the main things are iMessage and FaceTime. I don't know about your family, but I generally don't want FaceTime most of the time. I haven't used iMessage, but it seems like Signal is a drop in replacement, and the benefits are compatibility with Android and desktop apps for Windows and Linux.
Perhaps the play is to switch one app at a time. That's what I'm going to try to get ready to leave Android for Linux phones (assuming they'll be daily-driveable at some point).
iMessage and FaceTime are really not that relevant outside the US and, as you said, can be relatively easily replaced by Signal. As another commenter pointed out, it’s more about little things like Airdrop or iCloud’s all around seamlessness that cannot be matched by anything else I’ve tried. Family sharing alone would be a major loss if I were to switch. What Google or Microsoft have to offer in that regard is laughable in comparison (not that they’re any more “private”), and AFAIK, there is no FOSS alternative all of the iCloud family sharing functionality.
Makes sense, thanks for elaborating.
I'll have to look into the FOSS tools to see what could be a reasonable set of alternatives. Some initial thoughts:
But each of these are a bit inconvenient compared to what Apple offers. I'll think about it some more, and maybe I'll try building something. My kids will be getting old enough to have phones in a couple years, and I'd really rather avoid Apple's ecosystem, but their friends will likely all have iPhones so I'll want a reason for them to prefer something else.
I already use KDE Connect to exchange files with my Linux laptop and it’s not the best, but it’s good enough for the occasional thing.
Steam is not a solution IMO because it locks you in just as much as Apple while being clunky and giving you the illusion of choice. And it’s only for games. Family sharing on Apple products is more than games. If you’ve bought apps or subscriptions, you can share them with family members at no additional cost (if the app opts into that which is disclosed to you very clearly in the App Store). Screen Time is great to block apps above a certain age rating and to restrict or outright block purchases for children. Another thing is location sharing in the Find My app. I know there are many solutions for that, but I just like the UX in the Find My app a lot more.
About the Plex server, I’ve heard they’ve changed their TOS and are now pretty shady or something. Also, if I were to make a server like that, I’d be pirating stuff anyway which I already do through my go-to pseudo-streaming piracy sites.
I could see myself hosting a Synology NAS in the future, but that is still not as convenient or well thought out as the iCloud services tbh.
Yeah, unfortunately that's not possible (legally) without being the digital store owner (like Valve for Steam) or the seller of the app. Fortunately, we don't buy apps, so it's not an issue (everything we want to share is a free download, like Netflix or whatever).
But I think the rest should be possible, there just isn't a nice, FOSS ecosystem for it.
I've never actually used it. I just configured minidlna to stream in my home, so I put my movies and whatnot on my NAS and it's available on my TV. I set up a Samba share for my wife so she can upload/download whatever she wants, and it's working well.
There's the little things like airdrop as well
I guess there's not a super convenient alternative, but maybe something like Syncthing would be close enough?
But yeah, any kind of data synchronization or resource sharing is a little awkward.