Moving files on/off a phone fast & easy is one reason I've been in the Android camp. If I connect my
iPad to my
computer the only thing the
iPad shows in
Windows File Explorer is the DCIM folder. When my phone is connected to a PC I can see any folder on the phone in
Windows File Explorer and move files on and off the phone. That's without using any third party apps or cloud stuff.
But so many
computer users don't even know how to manage their files. They'll save everything in the "My Documents" folder. Or they'll save all kinds of junk right on the desktop! They don't want to open
Windows File Explorer on a PC or the Finder on a Mac. The same people will have their phone's internal storage completely maxed out with photos and videos they haven't bothered to back up. They don't want to learn file management despite the risks they're taking with their data.
I have a very difficult time sympathizing with these people when they lose a bunch of files due to some catastrophe, such as a failing hard disc drive, or they lose their phone. It is so freaking easy to manage files in a graphical user interface based operating system. When I was first learning how to use computers during middle school in the early 1980's our computers had black screens with a monochrome text command line. We're talking Radio Shack TRS-80 computers with 16k of RAM, an Apple II or a first-gen IBM PC.
Computer users these days are so freaking spoiled.
BTW, Canva does suck. I do not like the PDFs people generate with it.
Tell me about it. This week I had a headache involving a local
"professional designer." I needed vector artwork of a local company's logo. The logo was fairly complicated. They initially sent the typical batch of PNG and JPEG images. I told them no, I need vector-based artwork. The company owner said she would have to get in touch with the graphics person she hired to do the work. This graphics person kept sending f**King JPEG and PNG images, basically refusing to send what I needed. I emailed her, saying if I have to re-build this artwork in vector format her client is going to get billed for all the design time it takes to do the conversion. Considering the nature of their artwork that's going to mean at least a couple hundred or more dollars.
I'm pretty sure this graphics person created the artwork in a vector program. I think she wouldn't send over an AI, EPS, PDF or CDR of the graphics because she didn't want anyone else having an equivalent of her "master file," including her client. I guess that's so she can nickel and dime the client with service charges any time the client needs any sort of work done involving their brand.