this post was submitted on 12 Sep 2025
        
      
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Can't you get a terminal on Android? I did once upon a time. It's a rather clunky way of doing things, but it's essentially Linux so this shouldn't be too much of a problem.
I'm a Mac/iPhone guy, but it's the same shit. I use jdownloader2 (a Java downloader that uses yt-dl and others, it's basically the Swiss Army knife of downloaders) to pull the video down on the computer, then send it over the air to my phone. It would work exactly the same way if the computer was running Windows, and/or if the phone was running Android. I can also get files wirelessly between Android and iOS going both ways. Both the top video players (Outplayer on iOS and VLC on Android) can be turned into web servers, so I just put both phones on the same network, open a web server on one and connect to it with the other, send stuff right across. Android is, of course, a bit better with its file picker, but iOS is better at the server stuff, being basically UNIX, I guess. Either way, it's not a challenge to move stuff between them. But the actual downloading? I do that on a computer. And as you might guess from the name, Jdownloader2 uses Java, so it's the same app on both Mac and Windows and presumably Linux as well.
What do you think your phone is? It's dangerous to not consider the computer-priced device with the computer-spec hardware isn't a computer. This is why Google and Apple are getting away with murder on their pocket-sized computers and OSs.
I meant a desktop, obviously. I use an iPhone and I'm fully aware it runs macOS with a different desktop environment. All Apple devices run macOS, but the interface will be adapted to fit the hardware. It's all macOS underneath though, which is UNIX.
It's easier to explain Android, especially to anyone who knows Linux. So Linux isn't an OS, it's a kernel. The OS (or distribution, or "distro") is a collection of software bundled with the kernel that operates a computer. Android is a Linux distro for phones. Plug one into a TV and see what happens (ideally a Samsung). Apple could do this too, have your iPhone or iPad go full macOS if you put it on a big screen, especially if you also connect a keyboard and mouse. It's just a matter of including that desktop environment... and maybe a couple other things. But Android already does it. And it's awesome. So yes, they're computers.
@cerebralhawks
I personally don't actually own a computer that works. There are several in my life that I use, but none are my personal property.
@cerebralhawks you are right, I should have said PC rather than computer