I’ve heard the process is a pain in the ass and not very reliable. I am trying to prepare for when Apple adds RCS support because unfortunately in the US almost everyone has an iPhone and refuses to use a messaging app outside of iMessage.
I have installed sandboxed play services and the Carrier Services app from the google play store with a dummy google account and have put in my phone number in Google Messages for it to verify but it has not been able to do anything and is just stuck on “Trying to Verify” for hours now.
I’ve already tried clearing cache and everything as well.
Any help would be appreciated.
Edit: the following did the trick! Steps are to
- settings
- apps
- Sandboxed Google Play
- Google settings
- mobile data messaging
- phone number verification
- automatically verify phone number (toggle on)
- RCS should verify
- Back to 7. And toggle off
Then go to Google Messages and enter xyzzy in the search bar, click the debug option, click RCS, and click on Force Client to Unregister, and then I went to click on RCS in the settings again and boom it was enabled.
If you consider 0.6% more people to be “most”, well, sure.
Most people I know/see have Android, with iOS mostly being used for work phones (because there’s no advantage to Android on a work phone). I know one person in my extended circle (about 100 people) who uses an iPhone personally.
Every time I lookup the stats for the last year, iOS vs Android users, it’s about the same. Given iPhone is the defacto work-provided phone in enterprise, those stats are misleading (I’ve worked for 3 companies with 50,000+ employees, with 2/3 of them carrying work-supplied phones). So I think the number of personal-use iPhones is much lower than it seems. Keep in mind, those companies don’t permit personal use of company phones - it opens them to risk. So we all carry 2 phones.
Thank you for your useless comment. Actually not even thank you cause your statistics are wrong. US marketshare is 57% iOS and 43% Android, in the younger generations it’s something more like 85% iOS and 15% Android which is the demographic I have to deal with.
I would suggest that you consider that other people may live in a place with a different distribution of operating systems than you and that they might know what they want. Even if what you were saying is true for the OP, this isn’t even helpful.