Slashdot Mirror


Apple's Messages Offers Free Texting With a Side of iPhone Lock-In

itwbennett writes "Who doesn't love free text messages? People who try to transition from an iPhone to any other phone, that's who. Apple's Messages app actively moves conversations away from paid text messages to free Messages. Very convenient until you want to leave your iPhone and switch back to plain old text messages because suddenly you'll be unable to receive text messages from your iPhone-toting friends. There's an obscure workaround, and Samsung, which has a vested interest in the matter, has a lengthy guide to removing your iPhone as a registered receiver of Messages . But the experience is just annoying enough that it might be the kind of thing that would keep someone from making a switch — and that's when it starts to feel like deliberate lock-in, and not so much like something Apple overlooked."

2 of 179 comments (clear)

  1. Re:WTF by paxprobellum · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not "by default" - it's just because they already have a iMessage window open with you. This whole "article" sounds kinda "contrived".

  2. Re:Learned the hard way by noh8rz10 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    on the iphone, you just sign out of imessage. go to settings, messages, send and recieve. tap on your apple id and tap sign out. Then apple will know to send any texts to your number as SMS not imessage. although it shouldn't be a big dealio because when your friends send texts the imessage should fall back to a SMS when the imessage fails.

    I guess it's a step when switching, but it's hardly a lock-in.