- Jul 5, 2011
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I just replaced two devices (aging OG Samsung Note 10.1 stand alone Wi-Fi only, and an old Dell PC) with a Microsoft Surface Pro 3.
THE biggest thing that sticks out as a sore point is how easily I have full administrator access (via a separate account) on the Surface Pro to make changes as needed (ex. something as simple as applying ad blocking via the MVPS hosts file). Whereas on Android I have to hope for root access on said device to do the same.Why can't Android provide the same simple setup/access?
Thanks for the replies.All good points and ones I fully understand (should've made that more clear in my original post which I guess was more of a rant). I still wish Android would at least give us the option of having full administrator without requiring either a Nexus or Developer Edition device or hoping for some exploit to be gained in the system to obtain root (still waiting for this on my Verizon Note 4 retail version
). Instead bake it into the OS and put it somewhere where the general user can't easily get to it and risk screwing up their device, but allow those of us that are technically proficient and comfortable with the responsibility of it be able to access it and use it.
I just replaced two devices (aging OG Samsung Note 10.1 stand alone Wi-Fi only, and an old Dell PC) with a Microsoft Surface Pro 3.
THE biggest thing that sticks out as a sore point is how easily I have full administrator access (via a separate account) on the Surface Pro to make changes as needed (ex. something as simple as applying ad blocking via the MVPS hosts file). Whereas on Android I have to hope for root access on said device to do the same.Why can't Android provide the same simple setup/access?
Picked up the docking station for the Surface Pro 3; AWESOME! One more reason this thing trumps Android!![]()
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Easy there fellas! Hehe.
And let's be fair! Yes, he's comparing two different OS's and devices, but if you forget that and look at it from a FEATURE perspective, yes, a full-desktop OS will usually trump a mobile OS any day. Microsoft did do a good job with scaling down their hardware to a near-tablet size and cramming a full-desktop OS there. Android is a mobile OS. Feature wise, the OP does have a point.