Sujet : Re: phone migration
De : REMOVETHISbadgolferman (at) *nospam* gmail.com (badgolferman)
Groupes : misc.phone.mobile.iphone comp.sys.mac.system comp.mobile.ipadDate : 20. Jul 2024, 21:48:08
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <v7h7q8$45p8$1@solani.org>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
User-Agent : NewsTap/5.5 (iPhone/iPod Touch)
Jolly Roger <
jollyroger@pobox.com> wrote:
On 2024-07-20, Alan <nuh-uh@nope.com> wrote:
On 2024-07-20 09:46, Andrew wrote:
Jolly Roger wrote on 19 Jul 2024 19:06:21 GMT :
The primitive toy iPhone is incapable of migrating over the EXACT
location of every folder and every app icon (and every widget &
shortcut too).
False.
When I signed back into iCloud on my new iPhone the apps from the
previous phone did not migrate over.
These dingbat trolls don't know the difference between transferring
your data from the old phone (or a backup of it) to the new one and
setting up the phone as new and signing into iCloud. The former
results in the EXACT location of every folder and every app (and
every widget & shortcut too) being transferred to the new device.
The latter naturally does not.
Heh heh heh... Now that we've established how the dumb-terminal
brain-dead iOS does it, how do you think Android re-installs apps,
Jolly Roger, with all the app icons, widgets, homescreen folders &
even the data itself in EXACTLY the same locations on the new phone
as they were on the old phone.
I'll wait for you to tell us...
HINT: No need for the Internet (i.e., no Google, no login, no cloud).
It just works.
You can do exactly that with an iOS device.
Apparently little Arlen and his best buddy badgolferman have never
heard of Quick Start - yet little Arlen constantly claims he knows more
about Apple than anyone else.
Maybe you didn’t read the original message. I didn’t migrate the phone, the
IT technician did.