JollyRoger8X

joined 1 year ago
[–] JollyRoger8X@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Huh... How'd that one go missing?

Added.

[–] JollyRoger8X@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Technically, sure.

But the fact that one of the top comments here is telling people how to disable it with a bunch of responses thanking them says something about how annoying this feature is to a lot of people.

[–] JollyRoger8X@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (3 children)

Answer: A bunch of people read a clickbait article a long time ago suggesting that the fact that apps can see what you copied to the clipboard was a supposed breach of privacy (despite the fact that the clipboard was literally designed to work that way from the beginning). Then after the uproar, Apple added this notification to allow you to see when apps access the clipboard and deny it if you desire.

[–] JollyRoger8X@alien.top 0 points 11 months ago (1 children)

What exactly do you suspect is abnormal about this?

[–] JollyRoger8X@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

This isn't burn-in and was fixed in an iOS update. It was posted all over this subreddit long ago.

What rock have you been living under?

[–] JollyRoger8X@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

As someone who has used and developed software for all of the above mainstream (and some not-so-mainstream) operating systems since the 1980s, and uses each of them without issue on a daily basis, I can confidently tell you that's a you problem.

[–] JollyRoger8X@alien.top 0 points 1 year ago (3 children)

BINGO.

People buy Apple products because they:

  • are of excellent build quality,
  • have significantly better security and privacy protections than competing products, and
  • provide a superior overall user experience compared to the competition.

User experience is something that must be experienced to be truly appreciated and is not something that can be easily quantified with a number on a spec sheet. Specifications alone don’t tell the whole story and don’t indicate what truly matters the most: how good the overall user experience is. This is something that people who are hopelessly fixated on specifications have a really hard time understanding.

[–] JollyRoger8X@alien.top 0 points 1 year ago (2 children)

they will make the battery smaller like they have been doing

Actually, with very few exceptions, Apple has steadily increased battery size over the years:

  • iPhone 3GS 1219 mAh

  • iPhone 4 1420 mAh

  • iPhone 4s 1432 mAh

  • iPhone 5: 1440 mAh

  • iPhone 5s 1570 mAh

  • iPhone 6 1810 mAh

  • iPhone 6 Plus 2915 mAh

  • iPhone 6s 1715 mAh

  • iPhone 6s Plus 2915 mAh

  • iPhone SE 1624 mAh

  • iPhone 7 1960 mAh

  • iPhone 7 Plus 2900 mAh

  • iPhone 8 1821 mAh

  • iPhone 8 Plus 2675 mAh

  • iPhone X 2716 mAh

  • iPhone XS 2658 mAh

  • iPhone XS Max 3174 mAh

  • iPhone XR 2942 mAh

  • iPhone 11 3110 mAh

  • iPhone 11 Pro 3046 mAh

  • iPhone 12 2815 mAh

  • iPhone 12 Pro 2815 mAh

  • iPhone 12 Pro Max: 3687 mAh

  • iPhone 12 Mini 2227 mAh

  • iPhone 13 3227 mAh

  • iPhone 13 Mini 2406 mAh

  • iPhone 13 Pro 3095 mAh

  • iPhone 13 Pro Max: 4353 mAh

  • iPhone 14 3279 mAh

  • iPhone 14 Pro 3200 mAh

  • iPhone 14 Pro Max: 4323 mAh

  • iPhone 14 Plus 4325 mAh

  • iPhone 15:: 3349 mAh

  • iPhone 15 Pro:: 3274 mAh

  • iPhone 15 Pro Max:: 4422 mAh

  • iPhone 15 Plus:: 4383 mAh