The O-Connect software is what’s doing it for me. PC-Tablet-Watch continuity are exactly what I want from my phone, and this is the first manufacturer to get that right. Samsung’s continuity software is semi-locked to their terrible Galaxy Book laptops. I’m very curious to try O-connect out on Linux and MacOS. Unfortunately, Apple just nailed the high-power notebook segment, so I have to keep my M3 Max around until something else beats it in battery and power rankings.
I’m curious about this. I have an iPhone, an Apple Watch, and AirPods. I plan on keeping my iPhone when I upgrade my Android phone next (which is five years older; it’s a Galaxy S10) so continuity with Android stuff is something I’m curious about. I know the watches are better on the Android side. Maybe not so much for fitness? I feel like Apple Health is a winner, and unfortunately most of Apple’s focus on the Watch. Whereas with Android watches there’s more focus on media. That’s what I’m curious about. I’m not gonna replace my iPhone, but I will replace my S10. I’m not planning on replacing my AirPods, but the Watch is a possibility. Definitely sticking with MacBook but I could go either way — Mac, or a PC running Linux — on the desktop.
The O-Connect software is what’s doing it for me. PC-Tablet-Watch continuity are exactly what I want from my phone, and this is the first manufacturer to get that right. Samsung’s continuity software is semi-locked to their terrible Galaxy Book laptops. I’m very curious to try O-connect out on Linux and MacOS. Unfortunately, Apple just nailed the high-power notebook segment, so I have to keep my M3 Max around until something else beats it in battery and power rankings.
I’m curious about this. I have an iPhone, an Apple Watch, and AirPods. I plan on keeping my iPhone when I upgrade my Android phone next (which is five years older; it’s a Galaxy S10) so continuity with Android stuff is something I’m curious about. I know the watches are better on the Android side. Maybe not so much for fitness? I feel like Apple Health is a winner, and unfortunately most of Apple’s focus on the Watch. Whereas with Android watches there’s more focus on media. That’s what I’m curious about. I’m not gonna replace my iPhone, but I will replace my S10. I’m not planning on replacing my AirPods, but the Watch is a possibility. Definitely sticking with MacBook but I could go either way — Mac, or a PC running Linux — on the desktop.