Apple should be ashamed it waited to see you later to put RCS on iPhones

By news2source.com

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While many iPhone customers this week are happy about the Made Over Siri experience and the opportunity for the convenience of parking an icon in any location, others are more interested about RCS. Despite not being available with the primary iOS 18 developer beta, RCS messaging has been enabled with the second beta, except for this future one.

RCS’s compromise is simpler than it appears, as its goal is to provide a more intuitive and feature-rich messaging experience. The best comparison is to think of it as using something like Telegram or WhatsApp from a unified messaging app. This includes issues related to learning receipts, typing prompts, message responses and top class media.

For years, Google has tried to get Apple into RCS training to unfair advantage, and Apple did not have to give up until the end of 2023. In its surprise announcement, Apple revealed that it will be bringing RCS compatibility to the iPhone, adding that Era is also “working with GSMA to improve the RCS standard.”

(Symbol Credit Score: Android Central)

After installing the upcoming iOS 18 developer beta, I entered the Settings app to confirm that the RCS toggle was available. It was not only available, but it was already enabled. Later, I opened the Messages app and started sending a text to my assistant, Nick Sutrich.

To my surprise, the messaging app informed me that it was sending a text message and that it was using RCS. A few minutes later, we found that a dozen units worked as we expected. Typing prompts appeared, videos sent both ways were absolutely fantastic, and tapback reactions popped up when they were made.

(Symbol Credit Score: Android Central)

It’s also worth finding out that Apple has some work to do. Nick tried to respond with photomoji to the video I sent. On the other hand, instead of appearing like a tapback reaction, it arrived as an MMS on my iPhone with a message saying, “Reacted with a photomoji.”

After some time, the dialogue again switched from SMS/MMS to RCS. This is where another bottleneck appears, as one would expect the forward and backward transition to be in the right place. Regardless, I think it’s better than having to go into the Settings app again and toggle RCS on and off.

(Symbol Credit Score: Android Central)

As 9to5Mac’s previous record noted, “RCS support on iPhone depends on Apple working with carrier partners to get them to update their bundles.” As of the week of that writing, it was reported that RCS messaging was easiest available on AT&T and T-Cell.


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