For those who don’t know:

Texts from iPhone to iPhone appear as blue bubbles, while texts from Android users appear as green.

For many in the US who still use SMS to communicate, the blue/green bubble divide is a huge source of social conflict.

So for people who live outside of the US, what’s your version of “if everyone knew this was a thing in my country, they’d think it was silly”?

  • mumblerfish@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    People doing ski slopes in the cheese. Some people don’t care, some get angry.

    In Sweden we buy large hard cheeses and use the Norwegian cheese slicer

    to get thin slices for our bread. Surely a superior way of eating cheese on bread. Anyhow, if you apply the pressure wrong you will deform the cheese into a ski slope shape over time

    Some people are unbothered by this, which is completely insane.

      • Hossenfeffer@feddit.uk
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        11 days ago

        Scone should be pronounced scone and not scone.

        In some parts of the country, it’s pronounced to rhyme with cone, and in other parts it’s pronounced to rhyme with gone. That would be simple but there is another orthogonal dimension which is a demographic one (usually self-perceived class) which also influences the pronunciation.

        It is, consequently, almost impossible to guess how any given person you meet might pronounce the word. And it is also something which, while seeming incredibly trivial, people here feel very strongly about.

        I, of course, pronounce it correctly: scone.

  • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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    11 days ago

    Japan takes baseball teams seriously to the point that some bars forbid anything but the most basic conversations like with politics and religion. I think younger generations care less, but ive seen conversations ended as they got heated.

  • blarghly@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    the blue/green bubble divide is a huge source of social conflict.

    I live in the US.

    Wat

    • makeshiftreaper@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      You probably don’t interact with a lot of teens then. It’s pretty common in high schools and college campuses. I was told a decade ago that my green bubbles were probably why women stopped texting me after I got their number off okcupid

    • underline960@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      13 days ago

      Blue Bubbles vs Green Bubbles: Explained!

      The “Blue” vs. “Green” Bubble War is Insane.

      Why Apple’s iMessage Is Winning: Teens Dread the Green Text Bubble

      https://archive.ph/u2GXB

      Grace Fang, 20-years-old, said she too saw such social dynamics among her peers at Wellesley College in Massachusetts. “I’ve had people with Androids apologize that they have Androids and don’t have iMessage,” she said. “I don’t know if it’s Apple propaganda or just like a tribal in-group versus out-group thing going on, but people don’t seem to like green text bubbles that much and seem to have this visceral negative reaction to it.” Ms. Fang added that she finds the hubbub silly and that she prefers to avoid texting all together.

      ‘I’ve had people with Androids apologize that they have Androids and don’t have iMessage,” said Grace Fang.

      Jocelyn Maher, a 24-year-old master’s student in upstate New York, said her friends and younger sister have mocked her for exchanging texts with potential paramours using Android phones. “I was like, Oh my gosh, his texts are green,’ and my sister literally went, Ew that’s gross,’” Ms. Maher said.

      She noted that she once successfully persuaded a boyfriend to switch to an iPhone after some gentle badgering. Their relationship didn’t last.

      Such interactions have made fertile ground for memes on social media. During the pandemic, Jeremy Cangiano, who just finished up his MBA at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, dealt with his boredom on TikTok, quickly noticing that blue-bubble-green-bubble memes were popular among young people. He tried to cash in on it last year by selling his own merchandise that touted, “Never Date a Green Texter.”

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        I’ve seen so many articles n this but still have a problem believing it’s real. I still think it’s a made up fad by journalists and no one really cares. That would be silly.

        When I asked my teens the answer was “no one uses iMessages and that’s not relevant on Insta”

      • blarghly@lemmy.world
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        11 days ago

        To the extent that this exists at all, it’s basically functioning as a proxy for SES and knowledge of appropriate SES signaling. I’m sure Apple is very happy about it, but it doesnt imply that Apple has some sort of marketing campaign for it. People naturally sort themselves along SES lines.

        • underline960@sh.itjust.worksOP
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          13 days ago

          You asked a legitimate question, and I provided three sources describing the phenomenon.

          Just because you haven’t experienced it personally (or met people who have) doesn’t mean it’s not real, either.

          Plenty of people haven’t met a gay or trans person in their life, but that doesn’t mean that they don’t exist or that issues they face should be dismissed out of hand.

          Dismissing the question doesn’t add to the conversation. If you don’t want to engage with the question, that’s fine. Don’t comment. Just downvote and move on.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      As someone with basic knowledge of what it’s doing, I find it important to distinguish encrypted from unencrypted communications

      • otp@sh.itjust.works
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        11 days ago

        When Apple catches up to Android and figures out how to encrypt RCS texts, then both “bubble colours” will be encrypted communications

  • YappyMonotheist@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    Football (soccer) teams? I guess that’s a common one, but people can get really violent about it over here, lol. We’re all here enjoying football, something we all love (well, not me, but I’m getting in the mindset of those who do), there’s barely any disagreement between us! 🙄🙃

  • HubertManne@piefed.social
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    13 days ago

    its not really a thing in the us. never been a thing with me or my friends and im pretty sure this is one of those things where it came up but then was blown out of proportion where most everyone never really cared about it.

    • sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      12 days ago

      It is something I deal with almost daily since any time my family groupchat shares a video I remember I’m the reason why. It’s been explicit in work -related groups too, with some light teasing. Occasionally people with ask you, “so why do you have an android?” as if everyone with a choice would choose iPhone.

      I read some research somewhere that for teens something like 40% felt social pressure to get an iPhone, but I’m not going to look for it.