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I’m not going to respond in general to your edited comment, since it is not what I replied to originally.

Editing a comment to get round a rate limit creates a misrepresentation of the thread your interlocutor was responding to.

I don’t mind waiting for you to be allowed to respond in the normal way.

Nobody is talking about Android phones ‘not allowing sideloading’.

The question is only about what percentage of phones allow a sideloaded app to be installed from the web just by responding to a dialog, rather than changing a configuration.

Usually when I bring up sideloading as a reason why people should choose Android if they don’t like the restrictions of iOS, people claim that it is too hard for regular users to do because of the configuration required.

I was responding to a comment which said this had changed and now it is much easier.

I don’t believe nearly 100% of users have this experience yet, but I am curious to know what the number actually is, because it matters for developers.



> people claim that it is too hard for regular users to do because of the configuration required.

Who are these people? The error message has always linked to the settings checkbox to allow installing the app. The only thing that has changed is which checkbox it links to because the settings for installing apps from unknown sources have changed. Here is a video of the way it used to be. I know that you're going to say that you don't believe video proof, but this is all I have for you.

https://youtu.be/GuzKSUMyCUM


I don’t need video proof for this. Other people are confirming it.

‘These people’ are generally replying to the suggestion that if people don’t like iOS because it it doesn’t allow sideloading, then why not buy Android?

From what you and others are saying, sideloading may not even be an appropriate term - you make it sound like you can just install software from the web on Android directly.


> I don’t need video proof for this. Other people are confirming it.

So you take an uncomfirmed report over video proof. Got it. No wonder your "facts" are all wrong.

> you make it sound like you can just install software from the web on Android directly.

Yes, that is the case. Sideloading is just the ability to install apps from somewhere other than the official store(s) on the device.


I take a a report from an honest and reasonable interlocutor who has demonstrated domain knowledge on HN over a random YouTube video, yes.

If there is a wrong fact that I have stated, you would be able to show an example.




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