Sameer Samat, president of Android ecosystem at Google, asked a TechRadar journalist why they were using an Apple Watch, iPhone, and MacBook:

I asked because we’re going to be combining Chrome OS and Android into a single platform, and I am very interested in how people are using their laptops these days and what they’re getting done.

  • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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    17 days ago

    A decade ago this would have been exciting news for mobile computing.

    Enough has changed that all I can think is, uuugh.

    • ChuckTheMonkey@fedia.io
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      17 days ago

      Enough has changed that all I can think is, uuugh. This is exactly my feeling. While I still consider Google to be the lesser evil out of all the big tech companies. They have been in freefall in the last decade. Just the amount of telemetries give me shivers.

      Also, it will be a license nightmare. As far as I know, Chrome OS is proprietary and actual Android has proper open source license.

      • 73QjabParc34Vebq@piefed.blahaj.zone
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        17 days ago

        Parts of Chrome OS are available, parts aren’t. Parts of Android are available, parts aren’t. Neither are really Open Source, but both have Open Source parts.

        • skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de
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          17 days ago

          Same with MacOS and iOS. They’re doing the same shift Apple has done over the last 25 years. Build on open-source, and slowly pivot to closed-source binaries. The perception of openness lags for a very long time until people finally realize it has just become more proprietary limited crap.

            • skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de
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              11 days ago

              Incorrect. MacOS and iOS both started out as Darwin, the Mach microkernel, and FreeBSD. 25 or so years ago, Apple had open repos and package managers to install standard Unix tools, and the core of the OS even used things like cron to schedule tasks. You could even configure MacOS to not launch the GUI and run it command-line only. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwin_(operating_system)

              Over time, Apple slowly turned everything into Libraries, Extensions, and Frameworks, and slowly closed-source everything application-by-application. The same way Google is doing with Android.

              And if you missed the memo, there is no Google equivalent to AOSP. They killed it in March, because they are doing the exact same thing.

              • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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                11 days ago

                Google can’t kill AOSP as it is under the GPL. They will always have to release the source code. Even if a lot of the apps have been abandoned the core system will still be GPL. I don’t see them changing that any time soon as it would mean a total rewrite of the OS from scratch which would be insane.

                Android also is designed to run on lots of different hardware unlike Apple. I don’t really see the comparison.

    • Wolf314159@startrek.website
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      16 days ago

      Two decades ago people would remember when M$ decided to do something very similar on the desktop. Nothing has changed.

      • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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        16 days ago

        I’ll thank you not to refer to 2012 as “two decades ago.” Felt like I drank from the wrong grail, before double-checking when Windows 8 came out.

        • Wolf314159@startrek.website
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          16 days ago

          Who’s talking about Windows 8 or 2012? I said 2 decades and meant it. I wasn’t talking about the same time frame, just pointing out the history we are repeating. I was talking about “United States vs Microsoft Corp.” (2001). That would have been regarding Windows 98 and Windows XP. Internet ExplorerEdge is still an integral and unremovable component of Microsoft’s operating systems to this day and I guess everyone really has forgotten about Netscape Navigator.

              • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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                15 days ago

                Why did you obliquely reference a different company doing a completely different thing? Microsoft did do something very similar on desktop - making Windows 8 tablet-centric. Nothing in XP or especially 98 has anything to do with mobile computing.