
"Because of my work, I have both an iPhone and an Android phone, along with Windows and Mac computers. And, when it comes to apps, I have to give Google credit for making almost all of its apps available to iPhone and Mac users, even though Google and Apple are fierce competitors. Unfortunately, Apple doesn't usually reciprocate. With few exceptions, Apple apps only run on Apple devices."
"Google Calendar, for example, syncs across devices, so if I add an event on one device, it shows up everywhere, even in Apple Calendar. When I got my new iPhone, one of the first things I did was sync Apple Photos to Google Photos. Any picture I take is automatically copied to Google Photos so I can view or edit it on my PC."
Both iPhone and Android phones are used alongside Windows and Mac computers in mixed-device workflows. Google makes almost all of its apps available to iPhone and Mac users, while Apple generally restricts its apps to Apple devices. Google monetizes its apps through advertising, subscriptions, storage fees, customer loyalty, and anonymized data for research and product improvement. Many Google apps sync seamlessly across platforms, such as Google Calendar synchronizing events across devices and Google Photos automatically copying pictures for cross-device viewing and editing. Google Photos provides advanced editing tools like Magic Eraser and AI-driven 'Help me edit' features that exceed some Apple equivalents.
Read at www.mercurynews.com
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