Also, while iOS 8 brings some much needed updates and features, I think Lollipop is going to widen the functionality gap between Android and iOS again IMO.
If by gap you mean canyon.
LOL! One of the reasons I ended up ditching the iPhone 6. The two OS are just not even in the same league at the moment, and Android L will end up destroying anything Apple comes up with for years.
Bull****. What do you want to do on iOS that you can't? Change icons? Change launchers? Honestly iOS is amazing and due to your bias you are neglecting that little truth.
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Having extensive experience with both OSes I can say that iOS 8 does lag behind lollipop in quite a few areas.
App extensions will never be as good as sharing intents
The lack of app defaults on iOS is noticeable.
Third party keyboards are treated as second class citizens. They have limited functionality compared to Android.
Now for the performance difference:
There isn't one.
Fluidity and smoothness is equal.
App crashes are the same if not better on lollipop. There will be growing pains as apps get updated, but iOS goes through that as well.
I would suggest spending quality time with both before showing your obvious bias.
Actually if you press the home buttonLike if I'm in an app and open an email or text, you have to go back to the home screen or open multi tasking just to get back to what you were doing.
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Actually if you press the home button three times it will open the recent app menu.
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Actually if you press the home button three times it will open the recent app menu.
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I am a long time Android user (first Android phone was the original Motorola Droid) who had brief flirtations with both iOS (about 4 months) and Windows Phone (off and on for about a year). The main reasons I stayed on Android over iOS were the lack of large screens and the out dated design. iOS 7 dealt with the design, the iPhone 6+ dealt with the screen size. Couple that with the high price of the Nexus 6, and I am seriously considering replacing my dying Nexus 5 with an iPhone 6+. I love the hardware, iOS 8 looks good, and iOS still gets most apps before Android. Now, the only thing really holding me back is the amount of money I have invested in Android apps. Convince me I should stay on Android and buy a Nexus 6 (the only device that checks every single box I want in an Android phone).
The back button thing is legitimate, but I use multi-tasking to switch between apps now anyways, so that aspect of it isn't a big deal to me. The browser is really the only place I use the back button regularly.
Possibly the top reason that I won`t go iOS is this....no back button just means that you`re going around in circles,app..home screen/ app/ home screen.....no back button,no way.
You can swipe to go back on iOS.
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That's not a system wide gesture. There are apps that I've come across where this doesn't work.
When it does work (which in my experience is more of the time) it's nice.
This is true. Devs just need to implement it more because it works fantastic with Safari and Flipboard.
The reason the back button has always been awesome on Android is that it is intrinsic to the OS itself...you do not have to rely on DEV support for it to work. It's there all the time, like the ESC key is on the Desktop.
Its unpredictable. Which is why I prefer the swipe to go back.
Iphone 6 plus vs Nexus 6 , nexus 6 have better OS, better hardware and have more screen in less size. nexus 6 is cheaper and strongest than Iphone 6+.
mayde this graphic helps you.
View attachment 144972
How is it unpredictable? Mine is 100% predictable. I always know exactly what is going to happen if I hit the back button. So much so that I am confident hitting it multiple times. I know which screen I will end up on when doing that.