Hi David.
When you set to offline, the data is downloaded to your device at that time and
so needs a wifi connection or data signal to download it. There is no other
way to make something offline that is currently online. I’m not sure whether
it’s clever enough though that if you previously had the data offline, changed
to online and then back to offline, it would realise the data is still present
on the device but marked as deleted and so removes the deleted marker and gives
the impression that it has made it offline without having to download from the
cloud.
Try making something offline that you have never downloaded previously while
your phone is in airplane mode. If it works, I take the above back and will
believe in magic from now on.
Regards.
Kevin
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of David
Griffith
Sent: 27 November 2020 17:57
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] Re: android phone versus iPhone
No I am afraid that is simply not correct Steve.
For example on an iPhone go to any folder in the DropBox hierarchy.
Flick up and down and you will see the option make available offline.
Select that and you will have local storage irrespective of signal.
I have just done it to a folder of Audio Books to make sure it works.
David G.
– look for the offline tab on Dropbox.
Sent from Mail <https://%20/go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for
Windows 10
From: Steve Nutt <mailto:steve@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: 27 November 2020 09:19
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [access-uk] Re: android phone versus iPhone
Again, only if you have signal when you want to play it.
All the best
Steve
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From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > On Behalf Of
daj.griffith@xxxxxxxxx <mailto:daj.griffith@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: 26 November 2020 23:25
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [access-uk] Re: android phone versus iPhone
Actually all the cloud storage apps have options to download media onto your
device for offlin e usage.
David G.
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > On Behalf Of
goshawk on horseback
Sent: 26 November 2020 20:08
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [access-uk] Re: android phone versus iPhone
Importance: High
that's all fine when one can get a good data signal, personally I would rather
have the media available on my actual device.
Simon
----- Original Message -----
From: David Griffith <mailto:daj.griffith@xxxxxxxxx>
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, November 26, 2020 7:59 PM
Subject: [access-uk] Re: android phone versus iPhone
The easiest way is to use Cloud Services.
I use Cloudbeats and Cloudbeats for Audio Book s which will play any albums or
audio books you have stored in DropBox or OneDrive. These are the cloud
services I use but others are also supported.
I also use Open Drive which has an inbuilt iPhone Media player for playing your
Open Drive content.
David G.
Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for Windows 10
From: goshawk on horseb ack <mailto:goshawk_on_horseback@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: 26 November 2020 19:52
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [access-uk] Re: android phone versus iPhone
so how do you get stuff like films, audio books, and other media on to, or off
of your iPhone then?
Simon
----- Original Message -----
From: Sarah Stephenson-Hunter <mailto:sarahlstephenson@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, November 26, 2020 7:47 PM
Subject: [access-uk] Re: android phone versus iPhone
I’m in no way defending apple but I’ve not had to use iTunes for years and
don’t even have it on my laptop but not had any issues...
< p class=MsoNormal style='margin-left:11.25pt'>Sarah
Sarah Stephenson-Hunter
@sarahlou172
Www.simplyequality.com <http://www.simplyequality.com>
On 26 Nov 2020, at 12:57 pm, goshawk on horseback
<goshawk_on_horseback@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:goshawk_on_horseback@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > wrote:
ﻍ
yes, fully agree about hateful iTunes and the fingerprint sensor. I originally
just intended to use my android phone as my main media player type device
whilst on the go, as it is just so much easier to transfer stuff on and off of
it, because of not having to go through pesky iTunes!
but when apple so inconsiderately ditched touch id on the iPhone in favor of
pesky face id, I also then started using my android for things like my bank and
credit card apps, as I can still just use the touch id on that.
Simon
----- Original Message -----
From: Yusuf Osman <mailto:yusuf.osman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> < /o:p>
Sent: Thursday, November 26, 2020 12:05 PM
Subject: [access-uk] Re: android phone versus iPhone
Hi June, welcome to the list and I’d say as one member to another this is an
entirely appropriate issue for this forum.
I made the transition from an iPhone to a Google Pix el3 in early 2019. I went
for the Pixel because it is manufactured by Google and in trials I had in shops
and with other people’s Android based phones I found that the more additional
software installed by manufacturers the less reliable Talkback became. Talkback
is the Android equivalent of Voice Over. Later in 2019 I had the opportunity to
have a play with a Samsun phone using Voice Assistant (Samsung’s alternative to
Talkback). This just confirmed my experience.
I’ve recently upgraded to a Google Pixel 5 and remain happy with my choice to
leave iOS behind. In simple terms I am able to make and receive calls, send and
read messages, use WhatsApp, read emails, use the Audible App, Google
Chrome/Firefox, monitor my bank accounts using the App, use PayPal, in-fact
everything I did with my iPhone I can do with the Pixel.
There is a learning curve, as you’d imagine, when you first make the
transition, but with patience it is perfectly manageable. The one thing I
really missed was Seeing AI because of it’s ability to do immediate scanning,
particularly useful for products, but now there’s Google’s LookOut which does
the same thing and works really well.
Just out of interest what iPhone do you currently have and have you considered
moving to a later version? The most recent SE version seems to have gone down
very well. I left IOS partly i n order to remove iTunes (a totally hateful
program on Windows) and because I wanted to keep a fingerprint sensor rather
than be forced to use Face Recognition.
Yusuf
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > On Behalf Of June
Horne
Sent: 26 November 2020 11:40
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [access-uk] android phone versus iphone
Good morning every one. It’s the first time I have posted to the group, so
please excuse me if my question isn’t appropriate for this forum. I am
experiencing increasing problems with my iphone. As each update to the IOS
comes in, something else changes, and I feel I need to put in a bill for system
maintenance! Only joking, of course. But Apple do seem to be a law unto
themselves. I have seriously considered upgrading to an android phone, but as I
a m totally dependent on Voiceover, I was wondering if anyone here had any
particular recommendations, or indeed suggestions about what to avoid. Thanks
for listening.
June
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