Google’s Senior VP says he isn’t asking for iMessage on Android, but for RCS to work on
Last week, a report from WSJ highlighted the mental health effects of teenagers who feel outcast by their friends who use an Android phone. The report gathered lots of attention over the weekend and Googleâs Senior VP Hiroshi Lockheimer Tweeted against peer pressure and bullying as a way for Apple to sell products.
Following the weekend that the topic was discussed at length under the SVPâs Tweet, Lockheimer tweeted again with some thoughts and clarifications about the ordeal.
To start, Lockheimer makes clear that Google isnât asking for Apple to make iMessage available on Android (which Apple has made clear it has no intention of doing), but rather for Apple to support the âindustry standard for modern messaging (RCS) within iMessage, just as they support the older SMS/MMS standards.â
The Senior VP explains that the phone-number based messaging platform is the fallback that everyone knows will work.
SMS is an antiquated standard whose successor is RCS which supports read receipts, typing notifications, larger file transfers, and end-to-end encryption. Apple knows that iMessage keeps users locked to its ecosystem so giving its users a more pleasant experience when testing Android users might not be as effective to keep users on iPhone. The ball is now in Appleâs court.
All this boils down to the whole âgreen bubbleâ versus âblue bubblesâ on iMessage and thatâs been the way it is since iMessage launched on iOS 5.
Surely, this isnât such a topic of conversation in regions outside of the US, where folks are less likely to have Apple phones and more likely to use app-based message services like WhatsApp, Viber, or WeChat.