What are technical restrictions preventing useful apps on iOS?
Happy New Year!
What are technical restrictions preventing useful apps on iOS?
Offhand, I know of these... but what other useful categories of
functionality are not only not on iOS, but on every other OS?
1. Real background daemons
Reason: iOS does not allow long-running background processes.
Examples: Tasker (Android), cron (Linux), launchd services (macOS)
On 2026-01-02 17:00, Maria Sophia wrote:
Happy New Year!
What are technical restrictions preventing useful apps on iOS?
Offhand, I know of these... but what other useful categories of
functionality are not only not on iOS, but on every other OS?
1. Real background daemons
Reason: iOS does not allow long-running background processes.
Examples: Tasker (Android), cron (Linux), launchd services (macOS)
You're wrong.
<https://developer.apple.com/documentation/backgroundtasks/performing-long-running-tasks-on-ios-and-ipados/>
But what else is new.
Since you were wrong right off the top, why would I bother with anything else?
On Jan 2, 2026 at 8:00:41 PM EST, "Maria Sophia" <mariasophia@comprehension.com> wrote:
What are technical restrictions preventing useful apps on iOS?
Nothing. I have loads of useful apps on my iPhones and iPads. Are you saying you have actually logged in to one of your alleged iOS devices, gone to the App Store and found nothing useful?
Uh huh. Sure.
But if they violate security by running random shell scripts - or other absurd
shit that apps have no business doing - then they will not work. They won't even make it into the App Store. And since loading from random websites is not
allowed - DING DING DING - iOS is more secure than Android.
AGAIN, iOS is all about security. So we don't need the "secure browsers" that Android and Windows need.
But hey, keep up the good work by asking ridiculous, easy-to-answer questions.
Questions that have already been answered many times.
Any new insights on "crappy batteries" you would like to share? Any questions on how to move files back and forth between Windows and iOS?
On Jan 2, 2026 at 8:00:41 PM EST, "Maria Sophia" <mariasophia@comprehension.com> wrote:
What are technical restrictions preventing useful apps on iOS?
Nothing. I have loads of useful apps on my iPhones and iPads. Are you saying you have actually logged in to one of your alleged iOS devices, gone to the App Store and found nothing useful?
Uh huh. Sure.
But if they violate security by running random shell scripts - or other absurd
shit that apps have no business doing - then they will not work. They won't even make it into the App Store. And since loading from random websites is not
allowed - DING DING DING - iOS is more secure than Android.
AGAIN, iOS is all about security. So we don't need the "secure browsers" that Android and Windows need.
But hey, keep up the good work by asking ridiculous, easy-to-answer questions.
Questions that have already been answered many times.
Any new insights on "crappy batteries" you would like to share? Any questions on how to move files back and forth between Windows and iOS?
On Jan 2, 2026 at 8:26:28'PM EST, "Alan" <nuh-uh@nope.com> wrote:
On 2026-01-02 17:00, Maria Sophia wrote:
Happy New Year!
What are technical restrictions preventing useful apps on iOS?
Offhand, I know of these... but what other useful categories of
functionality are not only not on iOS, but on every other OS?
1. Real background daemons
Reason: iOS does not allow long-running background processes.
Examples: Tasker (Android), cron (Linux), launchd services (macOS)
You're wrong.
So Arlen is either stupid or lying???? SHOCKING!!!!
<https://developer.apple.com/documentation/backgroundtasks/performing-long-running-tasks-on-ios-and-ipados/>
But what else is new.
Well, TBF he DOES have a new name. But of course he STILL has the same old, tired act.
Since you were wrong right off the top, why would I bother with anything
else?
Touche.
But the good news is, he IS consistent. Arlen has maintained his 100% score on
NEVER being correct on ANYTHING he posts.
On Jan 2, 2026 at 8:26:28rC>PM EST, "Alan" <nuh-uh@nope.com> wrote:
On 2026-01-02 17:00, Maria Sophia wrote:
Happy New Year!
What are technical restrictions preventing useful apps on iOS?
Offhand, I know of these... but what other useful categories of
functionality are not only not on iOS, but on every other OS?
1. Real background daemons
Reason: iOS does not allow long-running background processes.
Examples: Tasker (Android), cron (Linux), launchd services (macOS)
You're wrong.
So Arlen is either stupid or lying???? SHOCKING!!!!
<https://developer.apple.com/documentation/backgroundtasks/performing-long-running-tasks-on-ios-and-ipados/>
But what else is new.
Well, TBF he DOES have a new name. But of course he STILL has the same old, tired act.
Since you were wrong right off the top, why would I bother with anything
else?
Touche.
But the good news is, he IS consistent. Arlen has maintained his 100% score on
NEVER being correct on ANYTHING he posts.
The moron
Tyrone wrote:
On Jan 2, 2026 at 8:26:28'PM EST, "Alan" <nuh-uh@nope.com> wrote:
On 2026-01-02 17:00, Maria Sophia wrote:
Happy New Year!You're wrong.
What are technical restrictions preventing useful apps on iOS?
Offhand, I know of these... but what other useful categories of
functionality are not only not on iOS, but on every other OS?
1. Real background daemons
Reason: iOS does not allow long-running background processes.
Examples: Tasker (Android), cron (Linux), launchd services (macOS) >>>
So Arlen is either stupid or lying???? SHOCKING!!!!
<https://developer.apple.com/documentation/backgroundtasks/performing-long-running-tasks-on-ios-and-ipados/>
But what else is new.
Well, TBF he DOES have a new name. But of course he STILL has the same old, >> tired act.
Regarding that Apple background tasks URL...
<https://developer.apple.com/documentation/backgroundtasks/performing-long-running-tasks-on-ios-and-ipados/>
B. The Apple documentation linked above does not contradict the claim.
It describes background tasks that extend limited work begun in the
foreground. These tasks are discretionary, resource-dependent, and
cannot run indefinitely or autonomously. They are simply not close to
nor equivalent to real background daemons on Android, Linux, or macOS.
C. Every other mainstream OS allows at least one of the following:
a. user-scheduled recurring jobs (cron, systemd timers, Tasker)
b. autonomous background services that start at boot
c. persistent processes that run without user interaction
iOS allows none of these. That is the distinction being discussed.
D. The purpose of this thread is not to debate personal opinions about
iOS, but to identify categories of functionality that iOS restricts
at the architectural level. Background daemons are one such category,
and the Apple documentation confirms the limitation rather than
refuting it.
Since you were wrong right off the top, why would I bother with anything >>> else?
Touche.
But the good news is, he IS consistent. Arlen has maintained his 100% score on
NEVER being correct on ANYTHING he posts.
As I've already replied to your other post...
A. iOS does not allow arbitrary background daemons. Only short,
system-managed background tasks are permitted, and they cannot run
indefinitely or start on their own. Apple does provide
BGProcessingTask and BGContinuedProcessingTask, but these are not
daemons. They must be initiated by foreground activity, they run only
when the system decides resources are available, and they cannot run
persistently or autonomously like cron, Tasker, or launchd services.
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