• Scrubbles
    link
    fedilink
    English
    518 months ago

    I really, really don’t understand what their business plan was. At it’s core it used an exploit to trick Apple into thinking the messages were legit, did they not think Apple was going to close the loophole?

    If Apple wanted iMessage on android it would be on Android. The only people bringing iMessage to Android is Apple, and anyone who figures a way around that is going to get ban-hammered by Apple.

    • @noodlejetski@lemm.ee
      link
      fedilink
      288 months ago

      I really, really don’t understand what their business plan was

      iMessage on Android wasn’t their main goal, it’s just what made them famous. they’ve set out as an all-in-one messaging app (basically they let you register on their Matrix server with bridges for other messaging servers, so that they can manage them for you if you trust them enough) that also included iMessage support. for now it’s free but they’re supposedly planning to add some extra features that will require a subscription.

      • @pimeys@lemmy.nauk.io
        link
        fedilink
        108 months ago

        You can also very easily run the bridges yourself if you don’t trust them. I do so in my homelab, it was 10 minutes of work setting it all up. Super stable, and e2e from my side.

        For me their value proposition is their new beta android app which is the best Android matrix client, and their quite fast matrix server. That might change in the future when conduit is fast enough…

    • Chloyster [she/her]
      link
      fedilink
      178 months ago

      Yeah I’m kind of puzzled by it too lol. I wish they had just kept their original solution of using Macs to run iMessage. Perhaps if they had gotten popular it still would have been blocked, but their whole strategy of being super open about it is odd. I suppose they thought they could fight it but evidently that wasn’t the case.

      Overall though I agree with the post, the app is really nice, the new android version is super slick and if they can get all the other connections working locally like they want, it’ll be even better

      • Chris Remington
        link
        fedilink
        138 months ago

        They spent around $750,000 building that iMessage bridge…shame…However, there are many people self-hosting and still using iMessage on Android…that will, likely, get smacked down soon. I’ve used Beeper since the early Beta (a little over three years now) and I love it.

    • warm
      link
      fedilink
      68 months ago

      Marketing, I for one had never heard of the app until the Apple fiasco they brewed up.

    • arran 🇦🇺
      link
      fedilink
      28 months ago

      At some point they said that after beta it would be $9 a month. But that messaging seems to have disappeared.

  • @Ashtefere@aussie.zone
    link
    fedilink
    148 months ago

    I have been using the new beeper. It’s life changing. Having all my conversations in just one app is actually making me talk to me friends more. It’s great!

    Fuck iMessage though. Don’t know why people give such a shit.

  • AutoTL;DRB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    38 months ago

    🤖 I’m a bot that provides automatic summaries for articles:

    Click here to see the summary

    Late last year, the company bet big on a hacked-together iMessage app for Android, only to be shut down by Apple within days.

    And the answer was to stop fighting Apple and return to its original goal: bringing every chat app — iMessage excepted — into a single place.

    You can then connect Beeper to messaging services like Telegram, WhatsApp, Messenger, and Signal and to social platforms like Instagram, LinkedIn, and X.

    Besides the bursting inbox, Beeper isn’t a lot different from the other texting apps I’ve used, as you can attach images, record voice messages, and create group chats.

    The new Beeper comes with features the previous version didn’t have, including a refreshed design as well as the ability to link new messaging platforms from the mobile app — not just the desktop client.

    There are also some experimental features you can try, including a fully end-to-end encrypted on-device Signal bridge and a sticker maker.


    Saved 81% of original text.