Originally Posted By: Tim
Originally Posted By: tfabris
Either that or it makes Apple look like they're trying to push their default apps on us and to downplay third party applications.

Wasn't that the basis for a pretty large lawsuit against another operating system?
There was a market share factor involved. iPhone currently is nowhere near Windows percentages that occurred during the peak Windows era.

Lots of anti-user behavior in the mobile space. I consider the mobile operators collusive control of SMS (and the associated price bundling) to be anticompetitive, yet somehow this is widely perceived as acceptable. There are many things users cannot do with SMS because the mobile companies forbid or restrict access from outsiders.