Sujet : Re: iPhone USB access
De : dave (at) *nospam* dave123royal.com (Dave Royal)
Groupes : comp.mobile.androidDate : 21. Dec 2024, 13:47:30
Autres entêtes
Organisation : news.eternal-september.org
Message-ID : <vk6dd4$1n6g$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
User-Agent : Mod.PiaoHong.Usenet.Client:2.02.M16
Jörg Lorenz <
hugybear@gmx.net> Wrote in message:
On 21.12.24 12:18, Dave Royal wrote:
VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> Wrote in message:
Dave Royal <dave@dave123royal.com> wrote:
>
VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> Wrote in message:
>
B00ze <B00ze64@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
I'm an Android user thinking of getting an iPhone, and I see articles
about apps that let ppl share files with their PCs, and I'm wondering
why is there such an app? If I plug an iPhone into my PC's USB port, do
I not get access to the iPhone's filesysten?
>
No. All you see are photos and videos from the camera.
>
https://discussions.apple.com/welcome
>
So you don't need to go there.
>
Apple likes their walled garden. The article below mentions iTunes.
The OP didn't mention his PC's OS. iTunes runs on Windows. Maybe runs
under WINE on Linux. By its name, not sure if it only allows access to
media folders, or to all folders. Never bothered with anything Apple.
>
https://support.apple.com/guide/iphone/transfer-files-between-devices-iphf2d851b9/ios
Well, iOS is clearly off-topic as VanguardLH's first answer hints.
So I'll just say, as someone who uses an Android tablet, an
iPhone, Linux and Windows PCs (though not a Mac) that the iOS is
the most difficult to get stuff into and out off and and between
apps - by design - especially if you don't want to use a cloud
service such as Dropbox. I often use FTP.
Total nonsense. No reasonable person would do this. You can try but it
is only for people with a lot of spare time.
You're right: normal iPhone users would not do it. I mentioned it
because it's the nearest equivalent to transferring (non-camera)
files from an Android to a PC via USB. And I only do it to get
certain files onto or off my iPhone without using a cloud service
- iCloud, Dropbox, etc. Using a cloud service is the easy way to
do it.
Several iOS apps have FTP functions built it, such as my media
player, foobar2000.
But forget iTunes.
iTunes does not exist in the Apple world any more for years now.
-- Remove numerics from my email address.