Experience, hmmm
Mr. Cook! Experience, we're talking experience here:
What about a larger screen experience? What about Swype-like input experience? Take SwiftKey (with Flow, its greatest asset!), integrate it system-wide (as you do Emoji since a couple of years), buy Fleksy, integrate it, too as an alternative input to choose from at will.
Experience, experience we're talking here: a hampered experience of a small (and very narrow) screen, the compromised experience of jabbing at a capacitative touchscreen (instead of swiping along with a finger)? An autocorrection that, although quite a revolution at the time of its launch, is evidently inadequate now - it will keep on "correcting" words I've been typing a thousand times, yet not bother correcting those I mistype accidentally, time and time again?
Experience! Experience of having to repeatedly restart and quit iTunes until all the through-iPhone purchases have been transferred to iTunes before I can sync the two without the dreaded "iTunes can't determine the apps installed on the iPhone" error?
There's a lot good to speak of your products; in heart I'm the same Apple fanatic I were ten years ago, but I wonder if you realise how aggressive your competition is in resolution of catching up with, and overtaking you? I'd say, their endeavour is paying.
AAPL stock continues (likely, it's being manipulated to) crumble, largely thanks to your resort of acquiescence and competition's thirst for market dominion.
An iPad, its lower screen resolution and limited memory nonwithstanding, costs more than a Nexus 10! Do you count on iOS apps and inertia alone? Well, inertia is a fleeting advantage, nothing to reckon on for the long run.
Get your act together - have Jonathan Ive (or someone more prudent than yourself) replace you if that's what it takes to rejuvenate Apple!
PS: On the positive side, SIRI's voice recognition algorithm in its current (evolved) iteration is better than competitors'. With proper English, at any rate.
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At this morning's Goldman Sachs Technology and Internet Conference, Apple CEO Tim Cook spoke about a
number of topics including vaguely addressing
rumors of a possible future iPhone with a larger screen.
Cook focused his comments on the user experience, saying that was more important than specifications. Answering a question about larger screen sizes, Cook had this to say (transcript
from Macworld):
Cook went on to talk about smartphone displays, saying that "some people are focused on size." He explained that some things are more important than simply size, citing the poor color saturation and brightness on OLED displays.
Going back to language that he has used before, Cook said that Apple will "never ... make a crappy product." He said that for new products, Apple must design "something great, something bold, something ambitious."
One thing he didn't mention was Apple's frequent assertion that the iPhone's screen is the perfect size for "your thumb" -- the ability to hold and use the phone in one hand -- a fact that was mentioned in one of the
first television ads for the iPhone 5.
Article Link:
Tim Cook: For iPhones, The Experience Is Key, Not Just a Larger Screen