Tim Cook would rather sell you an iPhone than add RCS to iMessage

Apple CEO Tim Cook dismissed the idea of ​​iPhone users adopting RCS messaging to put an end to the green bubbles surrounding messages when texting someone on an Android device.

When asked how Apple founder Steve Jobs felt about using the RCS standard in iMessage during Vox Media’s Code 2022 event on Wednesday, “I don’t hear our users asking for us to put more energy into it at this point,” Cook said. the night Instead, Cook said, “I want to turn you into an iPhone.”

But the man who asked the question, Vox Media’s LiQuan Hunt, came back with a valid complaint that his mother couldn’t see the videos he was sending. All of this comes down to a lack of interoperability between iMessage and RCS, both of which allow for high-quality images and videos — if they work together. If you’ve ever tried to send a video from Android to iOS (or vice versa) using your regular text messaging app, you know that your videos come out completely blurry on the other end. Cook’s suggestion for fixing this annoying problem? “Get your mom an iPhone.”

As silly as it sounds, the bubble color in iMessage that differentiates Android (green) users from their fellow iPhone users (blue) has become controversial. Adoption of the standard has clearly had no effect on Cook, who publicly pays attention to the opinions of people who own iPhones. Of course, there are other reasons to avoid adding RCS. Craig Federici, Apple’s senior vice president of software engineering, said, “iMessage on Android will simply help take off. [an] The iPhone is preventing families from giving their children Android phones.

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