anon5664829
Banned
If you want a basic smartphone that you'll know how to use right out of the box the iPhone is the better choice.
Or one that has superior app quality.
If you want a basic smartphone that you'll know how to use right out of the box the iPhone is the better choice.
Or one that has superior app quality.
I don't like Apple, never owned their product and the reason I don't like them is they have been stealing ideas and and sing others since they started business.
Oh and superior apps, nope, no one has all superior apps. My sister has some great apps I can't get and I have just as many great apps she can't get. Most of the paid apps that we can both get are cheaper in the Play Store.
Sent from my AWESOME Note 2
The Gmail and Maps app on iOS are superior to what's on Android. The Android Maps app still looks like it's coded for GB in many areas. Google developers even pretty much conceded that in some statements they made shortly after Maps released on iOS. If your phone is not on JB then Google Search on iOS is superior, as well.
Camera+ on iOS is better than almost any 3rd party camera app on Android (and better than most stock camera apps as well). The fact that Android has 40 3rd party camera apps doesn't matter - they're practically all worse than that one iOS app. Same goes for iWorks. It's better than practically all the Office Suites on Android.
The best 3rd party iOS twitter clients in some cases do not make it to Android. Where is Tweetbot? Facebook and Facebook Messenger on iOS are better than their Android counterparts. Even Google is releasing apps on iOS that has yet to make it over to Android (YouTube Camera, for example).
Where is the $0.99 Ad-Free Words with Friends for Android? It doesn't exist. Have you used the Android version period? It simply doesn't compare.
There are barely any apps on Android that iOS doesn't either have that same app or have something else that is clearly superior to it. Developers on that platform are willing to put in the time and effort to make great apps because people actually pay for them, in much higher numbers than on Android (which still lags ridiculously behind Apple despite having a ton more users in App Store income).
If Apps are a big deal, the iPhone is clearly better. IMO, the main strength of Android is being an early adopter of new technology. Because of the way the Android hardware ecosystem is set up, OEMs are forced to adopt these technologies quickly in the fight to differentiate themselves from competing OEMs. So things like BT 3.0 +HS, WiFi Direct, DLNA, NFC, WiFi Tethering (actually that was on the HD2 before any Android Phones, but I digress), Higher Resolution Screens, HDMI output, etc. tend to come to Android before iOS.
If you can care less about that, then Android devices suddenly stop looking so attractive.
Back around the 2010/2011 timeframe I was real big into having the latest and greatest, and having all the new hardware features ASAP, but since I've slowed down following all this stuff and shifted my mobile use to more productivity-type tasks I've not felt a need to even consider the latest Android handsets because even a late 2011 flagship blows through most of what the average user needs to do, anyways... At that point the quality of Apps, App Support, Cross-Form Factor Interoperability, Standardized Synching/Backup Solution, Desktop OS Interoperability, and having a non-chaotic services ecosystem becomes a big deal and Apple does win over Google in all those categories.
What about tweetbot, infinity blade 1/2,camera+,mailbox(best mail client )Lol Hardly.
This is from me, on my EVO 3D.
The Gmail and Maps app on iOS are superior to what's on Android. The Android Maps app still looks like it's coded for GB in many areas. Google developers even pretty much conceded that in some statements they made shortly after Maps released on iOS. If your phone is not on JB then Google Search on iOS is superior, as well.
Camera+ on iOS is better than almost any 3rd party camera app on Android (and better than most stock camera apps as well). The fact that Android has 40 3rd party camera apps doesn't matter - they're practically all worse than that one iOS app.
Same goes for iWorks. It's better than practically all the Office Suites on Android - though OfficeSuite Pro 7 comes close with its support for the biggest Cloud Services and revamped User Interface (and practically flawless PDF reader, thanks to Adobe Libraries), QuickOffice is terrible and Documents to Go is barely supported.
The best 3rd party iOS twitter clients in some cases do not make it to Android. Where is Tweetbot? Facebook and Facebook Messenger on iOS are better than their Android counterparts. Even Google is releasing apps on iOS that has yet to make it over to Android (YouTube Camera, for example).
All the better IM clients like Beejive and Trillian are on iOS, work better on iOS, and are better supported on iOS.
Where is the $0.99 Ad-Free Words with Friends for Android? It doesn't exist. Have you used the Android version period? It simply doesn't compare.
There are barely any apps on Android where iOS doesn't either have that same app or have something else that is clearly superior to it. Developers on that platform are willing to put in the time and effort to make great apps because people actually pay for them, in much higher numbers than on Android (which still lags ridiculously behind Apple despite having a ton more users in App Store income). WhatsApp is just getting a Holo UI version in Beta. How long ago was ICS released, again?
If Apps are a big deal, the iPhone is clearly better. IMO, the main strength of Android is being an early adopter of new technology. Because of the way the Android hardware ecosystem is set up, OEMs are forced to adopt these technologies quickly in the fight to differentiate themselves from competing OEMs. So things like BT 3.0 +HS, WiFi Direct, DLNA, NFC, WiFi Tethering (actually that was on the HD2 before any (I think) Android Phones, but I digress), Higher Resolution Screens, HDMI output, etc. tended to come to Android before iOS.
If you can care less about that (I practically use barely any of that except the screen on phones I've owned that had HD screens), then Android devices suddenly stop looking so attractive, and you realize you were buying into the hardware moreso than the actual OS or services ecosystem.
Opinions don't change the facts, so asking for opinions on whether you should switch is fundamentally a worthless thing to do. Only way to make that decision is to use both devices for a decent span of time. This is why I used to have 2 active smartphone lines with data plans when I had T-Mobile. So that I could have two completely different devices and could come to serious decisions on which I wanted to use (SIM Swapping made that easy).
Right, because those are the only apps out there..smh.
Funny iPhone is "superior" but Android is outselling it when it comes to world sells.
I could care less about what phone you want, does not affect me. My point was to someone complain people aren't neutral when they clearly are not neutral.
Sent from my AWESOME Note 2
Tango and whats appI do yearn for Face time and iMessage, but alas I compromise.
Sent from my Galaxy S3 using Tapatalk 2
I think its pretty amazing how their is 1 in iPhone and it sells so good. There are probably 20+ if not more different android handsets that have been released in the past 6 months so of course its going to outsell the iPhone.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Android Central Forums
Oh please, business 101 tells you it isn't about supply, it's about supply AND demand. Supply has not been and issue with either OS, so now it comes down to demand.
Sent from my AWESOME Note 2
Must of missed that course when I went to college. So u think if there were let's say 3 different iphones with different screen sizes and overall size that the iPhone wouldn't sell better than it does now? Its like saying hey wow look at that the whole Chevy car,truck,SUV, and van lineup outsold just the ford fusion. Its not very spectacular to me that 20+ android handsets outsell 1 iphone.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Android Central Forums
It's also common sense. If it is superior, doesn't matter how many others there are. iPhone used to outsell Android, what happened was people got tired of basically having the same look and feel with each new update and new phone released.
Sent from my AWESOME Note 2