Not so in Boston. On the T, it is about 80/20 in Apple's favor. In school (I'm in grad school right now), it is about the same.
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None of those features you mentioned are cool to me. Samsung reminds me of Dell and HP in the late 90's.....bloatware on top of Windows that ultimately made the machine work like crap.
In general, Android represents a cheap, mass produced American car. It may have better horsepower, miles per gallon, etc, but I like German cars for their precise engineering and aesthetic design.
To each his own, I guess, but Apple is a premium brand, and Android is like a Ford Focus.
Was Boston heavily Android before the VeriPhone 4? Even though in the past year, AT&T has smoked Verizon in Boston, Boston is known as a historical Verizon stronghold, similar to NYC, although not quite as extreme.
Multiview is the one thing that's really, really cool. I can see a lot of uses for it, just like I love working on a dual monitor computer.
I wouldn't compare the SGS 4 to a Ford Focus. It's more of a Ford/Chevy thing at this point. Both are very good. The difference now is that while Apple has not been innovating, Samsung and Google have been paving the way forward. The iPhone still has a nicer fit and finish on the software, and has a lot of nice subtle features, but the lack of customization and the lack of some of the big innovations is making the iPhone rather uninteresting these days.
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I hate to say that I'm totally objective, as I'm probably not, but I do own and use both on a regular basis. And I like both. But the iPhone is feeling boring, while Android keeps paving the way forward.
A few years down the road, when I want to upgrade the 4S, if I can't Jailbreak an iPhone, then that's the end of iPhones for me, and I'll surely go to Android. Otherwise, it will be a tough decision.