sveetsnelda
New member
- Oct 20, 2011
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I created an account *just* to respond to this. You need to go look up "Dalvik Cache". What you're saying only applies to running an application for the first time after it was installed on an Android device. The next time that code is ran, it's "composite".in short, Android will never be as smooth as iOS or Windows Phone because it is not a composite based OS like those are. android is an "on-the-fly" OS, hence is why it allows customizations, widgets, different launchers, etc. they're banking on the consumers not knowing any better by throwing out "dual-core" and flashy words that still don't equate to single core devices' smoothness (i.e. Windows Phone devices)...
I certainly understand where you're coming from about Apple's devices being smooth. They are *very* smooth. However, iOS users are "jailed" from changing their devices enough to make them _not_ smooth. That's great for someone who knows nothing about the device itself (the every day user). For someone who educates him/herself and wants to do what they please with the device, this is a nightmare.
Again, I understand the arguement, but I'm not sure that you know as much as you think that you do about the OS.