![]() ![]() The one app I don’t use too much on the iPhone is Chrome, mainly because you can’t set it to be the default browser in iOS. Because all of the Google mobile apps I use - such as Drive, Docs, Sheets, Photos (which syncs your iOS device photos to Google’s cloud), Google+, Keep, YouTube, Hangouts, Contacts, Assistant, and Home, to name a few - are tied to my Google account, the data on my phone is always the same as the data on my Chromebook. And it keeps all of my data in sync between the Chromebook and my phone. What this does is give me a similar experience on my handset, regardless of which phone I’m carrying. I use Google’s apps on the iPhone and don’t sync any of my data to iCloud. The answer is pretty simple to be honest, although you do give up a few features. But when I have both the Google laptop and Apple’s handset, people often come up to me and ask: “How can you use an iPhone with a Chromebook?” ![]() ![]() Sure, I use Android too: I have about a dozen Android phones from the past few years to choose from and I swap my SIM around regularly. When I’m out and about with my Chrome, I often carry an iPhone. ![]()
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