Subsequent 15 sec videos trying to convince iPhone users by focusing on:
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privacy & security (https://piped.video/watch?v=sFpuVW8SR_k), vaguely touts proactive protection without really specifying what it is in the video (they do show a Play Protect scan as an example), but pretty sure they’re referring to this: https://www.android.com/safety/security/
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emoji reactions (https://piped.video/watch?v=P0bcpUqEfdM);
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transferring photos (https://piped.video/watch?v=WLhREY3ynrE);
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device compatibility (https://piped.video/watch?v=HE7AklvsG5o), basically shows an example of device pairing.
IMO the examples are pretty basic and vague, not what would win over any iPhone user.
I still don’t think doing stuff like listing apps on the device is possible without at least a sandbox escape.
LSApplicationWorkspace.defaultWorkSpace
should do the trick, though you won’t be able to publish the app on the app store if you call this API. The only barrier here is Apple’s rules for the app store, which can be overcome using the standard SDK or a tool like Altstore.Damn didn’t know that lol.