Have any of you android users setup an iMessage server such as BoueBubbles or AirMessage? Or some similar?

If so, how well does it work? Is only an apple account required? Do apple users send your email an iMessage? Also, was it easy to setup?

Thanks!!!

  • SpezCanLigmaBalls@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I own a Mac and a pixel 8. I use blue bubbles. It works great. Don’t have any issues with it. When you send messages through it, it goes through your email associated with your iCloud account

  • Dandroid@dandroid.app
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    1 year ago

    I set up AirMessage, and it is very glitchy. I can’t message some people because I get an error every time. You need to own a Mac to set it up, and it needs to always be awake. So if you have a laptop, it doesn’t really work. There is an option to give your apple login info to a third party, and they will run it on their Mac, but I don’t trust that at all.

    • Dust0741@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Hmmm how is Beeper? Isn’t it run on someone’s Mac instead of your own? Is it FOSS?

      • Chewy@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        Beeper’s software stack is partly open source. They develop the mautrix bridges for WhatsApp, Signal, Discord and many more as open source.

        What they keep closed source is their clients (and probably infrastructure).

        The documentation to host their bridges is great [1] and the bridges works with most server implementaions (I know of Synapse, Dendrite & Conduit).

        I’m running signal and whatsapp bridges for years now without problems, but it’s definitely simpler to pay for Beeper.

        The problem with these bridges is that they have to decrypt messages and encrypt them again with matrix. This means anyone who controls the server running bridges has access to your messages. Self-hosting means I’m still in control of my data.

        [1] https://docs.mau.fi/bridges/index.html

  • tvcvt@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    It’s been on my agenda for a while to set up a Matrix server with an iMessage bridge with the idea I could interact with all of my message protocols from one place. I haven’t gotten around to it, but it might be worth a look.

    • Dust0741@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Agreed. However, iMessage is better than sms. And I am trying my best to remove sms from my life

        • Dust0741@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          Again agreed, however some people either won’t switch, or it would be more convenient to just use iMessage

      • BearOfaTime
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        1 year ago

        Well yea, any IP-based messenger is better than SMS. iMessage is just Apple’s implementation which only works with Apple devices.

        Seems to me the people who have a comm issue are the ones choosing to use a messenger that only works on one platform.

        I’m not on that platform, and neither is ~80% of the world.

          • BearOfaTime
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            1 year ago

            Wow, as many users as signal. Thats an interesting stat.

            I like the idea of iMessage. It makes sense - default to a proper, encrypted messaging system while allowing for SMS.

            Signal dropping SMS support is just so confusing. Keep SMS until many people have converted. You can always remove SMS later when it finally fades away.

            • jws_shadotak@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              Signal dropping SMS support is just so confusing. Keep SMS until many people have converted. You can always remove SMS later when it finally fades away.

              SMS support was dropped because people were using Signal thinking their conversations were encrypted and it was only through unencrypted SMS. It’s hard to sell the privacy part of Signal when it’s not actually guaranteed, so they got rid of that.

              • BearOfaTime
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                1 year ago

                I’ve heard this argument before and it’s bunk.

                Signal made it very clear when a message was unencrypted. And if that was really an issue, make the indicator more clear/obvious.

                How many users of Signal lacked the ability to know this, especially since any less-technical people were likely using Signal because someone like us got them to, so we would be explaining the difference, as getting people to use the encryption is our goal.

                Also, how would Signal know this issue? Were they monitoring users?

                It really sounds like a non-reason. It doesn’t add up.

  • Lasso1971@thelemmy.club
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    1 year ago

    Biuebubbles is based. I was running on an old Mac mini then switched to a vm on my server (spoofing the hw info from the Mac mini) for Ventura + lower power consumption.

    I use an old iphone to link my phone number, but will eventually switch to pypush as a way or registering without the iPhone