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- 25 Comments
Like the corner store forgetting to flip the sign on the door to “closed” after closing.
When you select text, you get options like Cut/Copy/Paste, Look Up, etc. Text things.
Apps can add their own actions next to these, such as the ChatGPT app adding the Ask ChatGPT action.
The thing is, iOS does not allow custom actions to be used outside the app which added them. So the Ask ChatGPT action only appears in the ChatGPT app and nowhere else where one would benefit from a quick shortcut like that.
The action is now mostly useless if it can’t serve the purpose of being a shortcut to ChatGPT from any text selection anywhere, because once you’re in the ChatGPT app, you could just ask - shortcut not needed.
Technical explanation:
iOS apps cannot add systemwide actions in context menus, like for text selection. At best, they can create a sharing extension to have their app shown in the share sheet (page where you select who you send something to) and potentially add an action for easier discovery.
The only place they can add a systemwide actions is in their own app, hence why only the ChatGPT app has the Ask ChatGPT action.
Technical explanation:
iOS apps cannot add systemwide actions in context menus, like for text selection. At best, they can create a sharing extension to have their app shown in the share sheet (page where you select who you send something to) and potentially add an action for easier discovery.
The only place they can add a systemwide actions is in their own app, hence why only the ChatGPT app has the Ask ChatGPT action.
Please bless us with some sources so that we can read more & discuss deeper.
tudor@lemmy.worldto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Why do some people defend the billionaires and capitalism?
4·2 years agoYour username on a post about capitalism makes me giggle
tudor@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Brazilian court orders suspension of Elon Musk’s X after it missed deadlineEnglish
151·2 years agoElon, free speech advocate, this you?
tudor@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•When EV startups shut down, will their cars still work?English
191·2 years agoAs long as the car isn’t dependent on an Internet connection or the manufacturer’s server and the ports aren’t proprietary, I think you’re good. I expect a car to have these.
Why I dislike web apps. They make the devs lazy enough to not bother making a native app
tudor@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•iPhones in the EU get ability to set more default apps, delete more built-in onesEnglish
2·2 years agoI tried fooling it myself several times with the aim of getting satellite connectivity in my unsupported country, to no avail.
Used a German SIM card (where this feature is supported), went in my basement where there’s no cell service so that it can’t read MNC or MCC from any networks nor can it read GPS precisely (the circle spanned almost all of Western Europe, that imprecise I mean), used a Raspberry Pi as a router with country code as DE, disabled Wi-Fi, used VPN, used the Xcode debugging tools to simulate iPhone location to Germany (this usually fools all apps into thinking I’m in Germany, including Apple’s own Find My), all to no avail. And there’s no way to feed
countrydany custom data.It’s insane.
tudor@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•iPhones in the EU get ability to set more default apps, delete more built-in onesEnglish
6·2 years agoAs a developer, you don’t really get access to any of that.
Mainly, you can’t access any history of calls and messages at all, nor can you automate sending one. All interactions with calling or texting has to be done with user interaction. Namely, calling requires the user to confirm the call, and sending a message requires the user to confirm, and they can also edit the message beforehand.
I don’t think that’s bad, given that messages are some of the most private things on our devices, and personally, I never had to use any of these or required more access. But more choice is always appreciated.
tudor@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•iPhones in the EU get ability to set more default apps, delete more built-in onesEnglish
49·2 years agoAn European iPhone, aka an iPhone which will get these features, is identified by a background process named
countryd, introduced in iOS 16. Its only purpose is to compute and predict the most likely location of the user (as in country/region) and lock down features accordingly.These are only some of the factors taken into the equation:
- GPS location
- Wi-Fi location
- Wi-Fi hotspot country codes
- Cellular/GSM country codes
- IP address
- Home and roaming operator regions
- Apple Account region
- Device region
- Satellite reachability
countrydtakes in all of these and more as input to provide the most likely country of the user. If that country is in the EU, then 💥 Sideloading, Default Apps, etc etc etc goodies
tudor@lemmy.worldto
Privacy Guides@lemmy.one•The spies in your home: How WiFi companies monitor your private lifeEnglish
4·2 years agoBuy your own router. Ditched my ISP modem, never looked back. The control, the features, all of it is now necessary to me.
tudor@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Ecovacs home robots can be hacked to spy on their owners, researchers sayEnglish
14·2 years agoI’d like some of them to connect to my local network, but not the Internet. I’ll work it out myself from there onwards and make some remote control solution myself, thank you.
tudor@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Patreon: adding Apple’s 30 percent tax is the price of staying in the App StoreEnglish
131·2 years agoThis couldn’t have come at a worse time, given their DOJ suit.
tudor@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Russia launches "social rating" platform to determine a person’s comparative “social status”English
1·2 years agoThanks for sharing your insight!






Under EU consumer law, it’s a requirement for the seller to refund you the shipping cost as well, unless you paid for extras like faster delivery. I understand that’s not a thing in the States, though.