I switched from a Nokia Lumia 1520 to the Note 5 and I must say it's a huge improvement. You will miss the simple, quick and intuitive windows operating system design that just worked near flawlessly but the access to so many more apps just trumps. Just ensure to get the standards that Microsoft offers to windows phone users on your Android like excel, word, power point. If you used one drive on your windows phone as I did well great news onedrive works just the same on android my pics sync to one drive and I turned off google drive. Then when you set up your email do it through the normal email application and sync your Microsoft account contacts to your phone. If you really miss the layout of windows phone there is a Windows phone launcher in store you can use that will give you a similar look and feel. Enjoy yourselfI'm considering making the switch from Windows Phone to Android, specifically the Samsung Note 5, but I'm not familiar with the Android platform at all. I'm currently using a Lumina 830 and I've been happy with it. My reason for considering the move is because I'm not real comfortable with the new upcoming Windows 10 Mobile or the new rumored phones that are expected to be announced in October. I'm considering making the switch because I want to see how the new OS shakes out over time and see the direction MS takes with their hardware.
I'm looking for feedback about the Note 5 and what kinds of differences to expect when switching. Anything you can tell me about the Android experience. What I'm not interested in, is Windows Phone bashing, just facts and expectations. Thanks in advance.
Just a couple more questions that came to mind.
1. How has your experience been with battery life? Does the non-removable battery in this phone live up to the hype?
2. How much of the 64GB of storage do you really get out of the box? And have any of you come up against a storage problem yet?
Many Windows Phone users make claims about so-called Android lag. Some even say, "just wait till you've used an Android device for 6 months, and you'll see the lag". I've been using a 2013 Moto X for 6 months now, and there isn't any lag. I haven't ever done a factory reset either. "Resuming" and "loading" on my Nokia Lumia 920 made that device practically unusable. Factory reset and not restoring any backups did not help with the "resuming" and "loading".Looooong time WP user (Lumia 800 -> HTC 8X -> Lumia 1020 -> Lumia 930).
The 930 disappointed me with hardware problems and overheating, so when an unexpected invite for a OnePlus One dropped in my Inbox I went for it. To be honest, it did take me a week or two to get accustomed completely to Android as an operating system. It's quite different to WP in its actions and gestures. But once you get the hang of it... oh man, there's no going back.
I remember writing a post on Windows Central about exactly this experience. It was an interesting switch also from a hardware perspective as the OnePlus One and Lumia 930 are very very similar on paper (CPU, screen resolution, screen size, ...). Here's how I would summarize my findings then (and now):
- Regardless of this phone having very similar processing power, Android is just faster. Apps open a lot faster and whatever task you can imagine is just that tiny little bit more fluent.
- Inter-app communication. I am frankly amazed to see how apps talk to each other in Android. E.g. uploading or sharing content to your various social networks or services is stupendously easy.
- Apps and availability in general ... Perhaps the biggest breath of fresh air and should be no surprise to anyone...
- Personalization: WP8.0 improved things somewhat, but no-one will deny that the level of customisation possible on Android is unparalleled. I'm on my second Android phone now (Note 5) and I've made the UI look completely different. Can't do that on WP that's for sure.
I will say this: as a UI, WP is cleaner and prettier perhaps. The UX is very intuitive once/if you get used to it (my wife never did... even after a year). If WP10 could solve some of the remaining issues (app availability, speed, inter-app communication) it could potentially lure me back![]()
Many Windows Phone users make claims about so-called Android lag. Some even say, "just wait till you've used an Android device for 6 months, and you'll see the lag". I've been using a 2013 Moto X for 6 months now, and there isn't any lag. I haven't ever done a factory reset either. "Resuming" and "loading" on my Nokia Lumia 920 made that device practically unusable. Factory reset and not restoring any backups did not help with the "resuming" and "loading".
Yeah. Just feeling unfulfilled overall... just my 2 cents.