Most people's currently desireable size screen for video watching, internet browsing, etc.
They would never stetch. That's my point.
A simple recompile MIGHT do it for very very simple apps assuming they designed the app without fixed positioning, but usually this would take at least some level of redesign, meaning then supporting 2 aspect ratios. XCode would have to be revised to support multiple aspect ratios, the same way that Android does now. So the developer would have to be an active developer willing to update that app for a new screen size initially, something maybe 50% of app developers would wind up doing.
If the app does NOT get recompiled / redeveloped, my guess is that Apple just puts black bars across the top and bottom, similar to how the iPad treats iPhone apps.
Ugly and no real screen size advantage.
This will apply to a LOT of apps. It'll takes YEARS for the majority of apps to support the new aspect ratio / screen size.
^^
If I am texting, I use my phone almost exclusively in landscape mode, not portrait
If I do text in portrait it is because I am doing so with one hand, which becomes more difficult with a wider screen
And if this is a race, where and what is the finish line?
Most people's? Based on what?
Does it become more difficult with a physically wider phone? Or what If there was just less bezel on the original phone?
Yep. Much like the retina transition. But the main point is that they would have to do this for any change in screen size. (Assuming that they are not going to drop the pixel density, of course.)
This forum's polls.
The sales figures for larger than 4" Android phones.
Why do all of these people (who I seriously doubt have any special background on the subject) assume the bezel can be narrower on the sides? Are there any other phones with extremely narrow bezels someone can offer up as an example? Certainly not the often deified S3.
They would not have to do this for a change in screen size in keeping the same aspect ratio and having an integer multiple of the pixel dimensions. Like the same or double. A straight scaling by an integer requires no interpolation which is what takes the processing power. Keeping the same pixel dimensions and a larger screen size would obviously decrease pixel DENSITY, but how much would depend on how large. If they went 4.8" say, they'd probably have to double the pixel dimensions.
Note that for the retina display, the pixel dimensions WERE actually doubled, so straight scaling WAS possible and done on old apps, so they filled the screen and didn't look that bad. That will NOT be the case fo a 4" taller phone. There will be black screen space, which to me at least, is ugly.
I went through this same delimma over the last few months. I saw iOS6 and the leaked parts and was not impressed.
So I went out and bout a Verizon Galaxy Nexus. Returned because of poor battery life, Pentile screen quality, and no Jellybean.
Got myself an unlocked Galaxy Nexus. Returned because of a completely different reason. I had jellybean now and better battery life. But I missed little things about my iPhone. A few things were the mute switch, tap clock to scroll to the top anywhere in the OS, the keyboard, scrolling, zooming, text editing, screen quality, etc.
Then I thought I'll see what the hype is all about and try a Galaxy S3. I went to the store and played around with it (I had done this several times before). As I was issuing the device it was fast and nice but some of the features i.e. tap to scroll to the top did not work very well at all. Then just using the OS in general was kind of blah to me as the OP says. Widgets and all the extras are okay but not great. Plus, I will jailbreak to get what I need. So, I put the S3 down and went to the iPhone 4S display (I own a 4). As soon as I picked up the phone it felt better. Not only the hardware build quality but the software as well. I admit I am used to iOS but it was just so smooth, fast, consistent, everything worked well and looked beautiful even on the smaller screen. It sounds cliche but it was just a pleasure to use.
I don't have much invested in the ecosystem so what I described above is what is keeping me with iPhone.
Overall I am VERY glad that I tried these phones and got the geeky "itch" out of me to get a new phone. It made me appreciate iPhone even more. This is my opinion. I hope it helps.
I can't believe that I never knew tapping the clock brought u to the top of any page.
After switching to the S3 and using it for 2 months, here's what I honestly think the iPhone does better:
1) Much better overall ecosystem - meaning a single source of system updates and purchases (iTunes), better apps , music and TV selection in iTunes. Upgrades available when released through Apple instead of waiting for carrier to release them 6 months later.
2) Definitely a bit smoother in scrolling and changing screens, although it's still pretty good in Android.
3) Much better looking icon shortcuts
4) Much lower audio latency from input to output - so you can run things like guitar amp simulators. Jelly Bean solves this problem for Android, but Jelly Bean is not available for the S3.
5) Better multimedia support in text messaging
However, to me that's really it. The huge advantages for Android are:
1) Huge 4.8" screen - Until you use a 4.8" for a SIGNIFICANT amount of time, you don't know how good it really is. Switching back to the iPhone seems like a toy. Rich screen colors and great black level - iPhone looks totally washed out by comparison.
2) MicroSDXC storage - You can have 32 GB and a 64 GB microsd card active at the same time AND swap cards if you need more room. Plus can get 128GB when it comes out. I can finally fit my entire music collection on the phone and still have plenty of room for apps. I no longer have to manage memory.
3) Replaceable battery - I can't tell you how much I missed this. Both the S3 and the iPhone 4S battery totally suck, but I can carry a spare battery with me for the S3 and swap it when i need to. So now I never have to worry about my battery anymore.
4) Workable USB - I can plug in additional flash drives (and have an additional 128 GB if I want on top of 32GB internal and 64GB microSD), external keyboards, gaming devices, etc. Everything works.
5) Very light and thin - Feels way better in my pocket than the iPhone 4S.
6) Widgets - I do use these all of the time. Live weather updates, trigger music players, facebook updates, etc. They do not significantly afect battery life.
7) Complete customization control in the OS. You can customize so much more in Android. You can get things like swipeable skinnable keyboards, live animated backgrounds, lots of lock screen options, etc.
8) LTE, NFC, Faster Processor -All things that the iPhone 5 will probably have, but the S3 has them now.
And a lot of other things. Yes, it really just matters what's important to each person (they are both good phones), but the S3 advantages to me far outweight the iPhone advantages. And a slightly faster taller 4" iPhone 5 with a new proprietary dock is not going to make any difference.
I'm composing this rather slowly from my iPhone 4S.All you can do is try living with the s3 for a couple weeks or so, and see if you can survive.
I cant agree with this one though. iTunes imo sux. I dont like it, i dont like being stuck having to use it and i dont like that i have to use it to delete thigs from my phone as it can get confusing doing multiple changes with it. IMO it is just awful having to use that and it is so much easier for me to do things with Android in that regard not having to use iTunes. And JB will be here soon enough for the S3.
And IMO, Jelly Bean is far and away more advanced than iOS6 is going to be.
And those those saying LTE was fairly new when the 4S came out...how about you still dont have 4G for cris sakes! Yeah your icon at the top may say 4G now with the 5.1 update but your still not getting it.
I'm composing this rather slowly from my iPhone 4S.
Slow, because I was a fool & bought an S III, now I'm on life support in the hospital.
Flippin biggest mistake of my life...