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Congrats, Apple, you just caught up to the Pixel 3

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Joe Maring / Android Authority

We all have that one friend who’s always late. No matter what time you tell them or how many reminders you give them, they cannot show up on time. And yet, you’re always happy to see them walk through the door. You knew they’d get there eventually, or at least you hoped so. Well, that friend is Apple today, and the party it’s finally arrived at is basic calling features. The year may be 2025, but I’m happy to party like it’s 2018 — if only for a day.

How do you feel about Android and iOS trading features? 69 votes I support it! 88 % I'm against it. 12 %

You know what they say about imitation and flattery

Andy Walker / Android Authority Pixel 8a

I get it, Apple, it’s easy to look up to Google. Its Pixel designs are more fun than the iPhone, its Material 3 Expressive update looks cleaner than Liquid Glass, and its overall AI experience is, well, better. I’m also quicker to recommend a Pixel to someone looking for their next phone than I’ve ever been with an iPhone. So, of course it makes sense for Apple to finally pinch a calling feature or two from the king. Only this time, I think I’m shocked it took so long.

After all, some of Google’s best calling features have been around since I was in college. It introduced Call Screen on the Pixel 3 series and followed up with Hold For Me two years later on the Pixel 5. I was envious of the first one when my roommate came home from Christmas break with a brand new Pixel, and I experienced the second one for myself when I upgraded from my shattered Galaxy S10 before its time had truly come. Strangely enough, they quickly became so good and so helpful that I almost forgot they were there — I just relied on them as if they’d always existed.

To hear Apple tell it, Call Screening and Hold Assist were impossible until just now... but as a Google fan, I know better.

But now, with Apple set to introduce its take on both features as part of iOS 26, I wonder what took so long. Did we not praise Google’s clever calling features enough when they were new? To hear Apple tell it, Call Screening builds on the base established by Live Voicemail, which has only been around since iOS 17 in late 2023. Google, by comparison, has offered voicemail transcription since it launched Google Voice in 2009 — that’s quite the gap if you ask me. After all, Google didn’t declare that its screening process was based on the leaving of a voicemail, so I’m not sure why Apple feels like it has to be.

I suppose the delay from Google adding Hold For Me to Apple picking up Call Assist isn’t as considerable — six years instead of more than eight — but I’m not sure it’s much better. I mean, Google had this figured out before Gemini was anything more than a constellation and it still shipped flagship phones with just one rear camera, but Apple was too busy slowly adding 5G support to the iPhone 12 series.

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