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My wife is so used to her iPhone she won't use anything else.

Me? I got sick of Apple not letting me do the things I WANT to do with my phone. The restrictions suck. I was also having a lot of apps crashing, less after I wiped it. (wait, all apple products are perfect) I went and bought a Smasung Infuse and havent looked really back. The only thing that iTunes does better is sync music.

I never used my iPhone 1 handed nor does my wife. Going to the massive screen on the Infuse has no effect for me but it won't fit in my wife's pockets on some of her dress pants.

It's all good in the end though. Both phones have identical battery life.

As far as OS, iOS5 is just catching up to Android as far as useability goes.

The upside if you keep an open mind is that it's good to have choices and the competition keeps the quality higher than if we only had 1. Let's face it, some of the changes in iOS are direct from android and if that didn't exist you would not have them.
 
My favorite part is the iPhone is better because it sells more lol. Mcondalds sells more burgers than any other fastfood chain, but they use the worst quality.

So you believe that the iPhone 4s is to Apple as a burger is to McDonalds?

:confused::confused: I'm going to have to kindly disagree with you on that one.
 
Design and easy to use.

My nephew could open my Iphone and play games even he was 2.5 years old :)
 
My wife is so used to her iPhone she won't use anything else.

Me? I got sick of Apple not letting me do the things I WANT to do with my phone. The restrictions suck. I was also having a lot of apps crashing, less after I wiped it. (wait, all apple products are perfect) I went and bought a Smasung Infuse and havent looked really back. The only thing that iTunes does better is sync music.

I never used my iPhone 1 handed nor does my wife. Going to the massive screen on the Infuse has no effect for me but it won't fit in my wife's pockets on some of her dress pants.

It's all good in the end though. Both phones have identical battery life.

As far as OS, iOS5 is just catching up to Android as far as useability goes.

The upside if you keep an open mind is that it's good to have choices and the competition keeps the quality higher than if we only had 1. Let's face it, some of the changes in iOS are direct from android and if that didn't exist you would not have them.

You could go further - if it weren't for iOS in the first place, there wouldn't be Android as it's known today. What they were working on pre-Google was more akin to the BBOS - a far cry from where Apple was going with its phone os. Android has, and I would guess will continue to, add features, just like Apple will, but I'm not sure that Apple looks at what others are doing as a way to make them better. I worked with designers who were told to not look at the competition because then you're just trying to design around what they've created. Apple does think differently and because of that, some features that seem to be naturals, may take some time to become reality in iOS.

Anyone can argue that this isn't a smart way to do things, but given Apple's position in the market (value wise), it would be foolish to suggest any of us know better than they.
 
iOS is a mature operating system that works extremely well for me, and its applications are top notch. When comparing apps that exist on both iOS and Android, I find that the iOS versions are designed better and are more aesthetically pleasing. Android apps have that desktop Linux look and feel to them that I really dislike.

But as others have said, it's not about having the greatest specs. That's an arms race that will never end, and as a result, some tech geeks will never be satisfied with what they have, because something better will always be right around the corner. For me, if something works beautifully and is reliable and durable, that product gets my money.
 
Now, let's replace this analogy with a more relevant one.

Lets say you want to take a drive up a canyon on some twisty roads, no speed limit and it is safe.

would you rather drive a nissan GTR or a nissan Sentra?

but but but the GTR has better motor specs! more power and torque!

I would have given the Android at least an Altima, but if you say it's more like a Sentra, your entitled to your opinion. :p
 
My motivation to stick with the iPhone is the amount of money I've put into making it perfect for me. If I were to switch to Android I'd have to buy apps that do what I need them to do all over again.

DING DING DING....and this is why I decide to stick with the iPhone.
 
I will never go with another phone as long as there is an iPhone.

I like the way my Macs work with my iPhone. It was because of the iPhone in 2007 that made me buy a Mac to begin with. I liked the way iPhone worked with the iPhone and how easy it was to sync music to it.

I have a friend who has an Android who doesn't own a computer and I see how hard it is for him to get music on his. THe internet is also slow on his compared to my iPhone 4.

When someone needs something looked up on the net, the come to me because of my iPhone 4s AT&T internet being so fast.
 
You could go further - if it weren't for iOS in the first place, there wouldn't be Android as it's known today. What they were working on pre-Google was more akin to the BBOS - a far cry from where Apple was going with its phone os. Android has, and I would guess will continue to, add features, just like Apple will, but I'm not sure that Apple looks at what others are doing as a way to make them better. I worked with designers who were told to not look at the competition because then you're just trying to design around what they've created. Apple does think differently and because of that, some features that seem to be naturals, may take some time to become reality in iOS.

Anyone can argue that this isn't a smart way to do things, but given Apple's position in the market (value wise), it would be foolish to suggest any of us know better than they.

I can go one further and thank Palm. I win.

Like I said, it's all good. I loved my iPhone for a very long time, 3 of them to be exact. I just outgrew it. No OS is perfect, no hardware is perfect.

The inherent problem is the APPLE LOVERS and the ANDROID LOVERS don't get it. I just fall half way in between. I'm even ordering my wife a 4S. I have an iPad2 to boot. All of the devices serve a purpose, each to our liking.
 
Me? I got sick of Apple not letting me do the things I WANT to do with my phone. The restrictions suck.

I got an android for this reason, and then realized I went a year without using flash or all those other things android can do that an iPhone can't.

For all those people that call Steve Jobs a marketing genius, his vendetta with flash was dumb and made everyone think an iPhone was missing out on something ("I'm not gonna let Jobs tell me what I can put on my phone!")? Too bad I actually don't need flash and if I could have put it on my phone for a day, I would have just stuck with an iPhone then uninstalled flash...
 
I basically look at iOS vs Android similar to how I view certain racers in Super Mario Kart (1992) which still is the most balanced of that series without the cheesy spiked shells to punish good players.

My fav ones from the first one was either Toad or Koopa Troopa. Same stats. Both have the best handling and second best acceleration. But these characters are for NOVICE users. That is like iOS. EASY to use interface. I figured SJ met so many dumb non-techie people in the world that he had to cater to them and it worked.

But for EXPERT level, DK and Bowser had the TOP speed even with the worst handling and acceleration out of the eight characters. I once raced my friend using Toad or Koopa with perfect turns and used shortcuts. My buddy used Bowser and he still dusted me no matter what I did. That is like Android to me. You have to be patient in the beginning on learning how to use it but the pay out can be nice at the end.

Give credit to Google. The progress from Cupcake to Ice Cream Sandwich is substantial. Android has come a long way since 2008. Symbian didn't change much in that same timeframe and has been around far longer. Neither did WinMo when it was still around or any other non-iOS platform for that matter.
 
I basically look at iOS vs Android similar to how I view certain racers in Super Mario Kart (1992) which still is the most balanced of that series without the cheesy spiked shells to punish good players.

<snip> That is like iOS. EASY to use interface. I figured SJ met so many dumb non-techie people in the world that he had to cater to them and it worked.

<snip>That is like Android to me. You have to be patient in the beginning on learning how to use it but the pay out can be nice at the end.

<snip>Give credit to Google. The progress from Cupcake to Ice Cream Sandwich is substantial. Android has come a long way since 2008.
Kudos for a humorous, yet very accurate post!

Your analogies are funny,entertaining, and oh so accurate.

Cheers :) :)
 
Specs don't mean a damn thing to me if the interface and user experience is crap. So, that's why I'm still on iPhone: the user experience is far, far better than Android.
 
[url=http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-RU5bwb5-mSg/TpP2OFIYSFI/AAAAAAAABGk/5sSki1ihWpc/s320/justin_wagoner_ipad_2_tent.jpeg]Image[/url]I read a lot of spec sheets comparing the latest Android
phones against the iPhone iterations. These to me are just two guys in a room arguing over cars or their preference of a PC or Mac. Everyone has their preference so the
arguments and comments on these articles are usually very passionate and
fueled, but they don’t answer the questions raised:

Which phone is better?

To really answer that question, is not as simple as fastest
processor, largest screen, and newest operating system.



“Comparing individual specs
between smartphones is like opening up the hood of a Ford Mustang and the hood
of a BMW M3 and pointing out why one is better than the other based on its
innards.
“

http://www.informationweek.com/news/personal-tech/smart-phones/231900086

[url=http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-oRqVGbpQf_0/TpHlwyMhduI/AAAAAAAABFI/CyGbNI4HgwY/s640/comparisonspecs.png]Image[/url]

So here is the most popular comparison, the Galaxy SII
running Android OS and the iPhone 4S running iOS5. People want to point out
here that the Galaxy SII is the clear winner due to the larger screen, however,
what people don’t seem to see is that the larger screen has two downfalls:

A: it has a
resolution of 800 X 480 while the iPhone while smaller has a resolution of 960
X 640. If you don’t understand what that means, it means you can see more on
the iPhone's “smaller” screen at one time than you can the Galaxy SII.

B: Lets talk
about LARGER phones for a second. Yes the screen looks awesome at first glance,
but this is still a phone and lets talk about the ease of use with one hand
while say… DRIVING??!!… lol. Below is the arc of the thumb when holding a phone.

[url=http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Rv2WUQkjH3I/TpHlyKm60bI/AAAAAAAABFQ/HihY87EbFH0/s400/Screentouch.png]Image[/url]

“Hardware will never trump anything if the software
running on it doesn’t use it to its fullest potential.
“

That can also mean holding
back
power to reserve battery or
make transitions smoother. A faster processor doesn’t mean a phone will run
faster if there are bottlenecks in the operating system or applications. And
one things Apple does is keep their OS unified long enough for developers to
really optimize those specs. (Update: One very distinct feature people all around the web can agree upon is the capacitive touch screens, Android users often feel stuttering or lag when scrolling pinch to zoom etc, while the experience on an iPhone is much smoother, which is software, not hardware. I.E. Older iPod touches vs newer Android phones.)

So OK fine, you are still unconvinced that the iPhone 4S is
a contender, even after the record breaking presales and you continue to be a die hard Android OS user.
That is fine, in the end it really is
about personal preference. Statistically, Blackberry users are hardcore email
users and their phones work great for that, Windows 7 phone users want to be on
the edge of their seats hoping their new jump will take off and they can be
early adopters, Android users usually tend to want full control over all
aspects of their phone, and iPhone users tend to want something they can turn
on and just use.

But screw personal preference, as we are here to say which
phone is better.

So here is what I
will tell you from personal experience;
I have owned two android devices
the HTC Incredible and Droid Eris. Both
of these phones felt great to me, they ran fast and without hiccup, but within a month of owning both devices I
looked on the web and realized there was a “faster/better”
phone already out
, so I started to get disheartened, I couldn’t keep up
with the tech. I had to use a family members upgrades to keep up to date or
shell out full price and hope my “old” device would sell on craigslist. That
sucked. Then I would find out that my
operating system was old
and my phone wouldn’t
get updated
. So even though my phone was better the OS held it back and
made it feel clunky. Well that is disappointing.

The fragmentation between phones is too great to keep them
all up to date, a downfall Google is finally addressing, hopefully, in their
next OS.

Android is selling more devices right now because there are more devices. What I haven’t seen
yet is an article with Android users exclaiming their fear that for once,
iPhone lovers can get a damn good device, the iPhone 4, for 99 dollars with
contract. That is a HUGE step.

Apple may not have shock and awed the world with a redesign
of the device but they opened up their phone to almost all the carriers and
made it affordable, just like android with their lower level competitors.

Let’s talk Droid AD campaign for a second as well,

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-K71MpwCko


These ADs really don’t scream, “Mother of two children, a
dog, and picket fence, I should be your next phone!” It is kinda a mix between
a bad B movie with girls in scantily clad bikinis fighting zombies with that
new movie “Real Steel!!!!” where Wolverine fights boxing matches with robots..
WHAT!?! (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ei5l3r1dV4I)

So we are not really selling to the females of the world,
and then I have had a strange observation: any girl I have known that owned or owns a “Droid” has either broken it over
3 times and eventually gets an iPhone or just doesn’t dig deep enough into
their Android phone’s settings and features to get the full potential of their
phone to work. It sucks that the operating system needs apps and widgets to
really make its full potential shine. Those features are cool, but you can
download ****** features, without even being aware, that drain your battery
within seconds.



Which brings me to the Battery. Whether your Android phone
has a 1750 MHZ or a 900000 MHZ battery, without application mitigation from the
operating system, the battery will still drain faster than it should. iOS may
not have widgets but what they do have mitigates the battery to A, last longer,
and B, charge faster. Those are TWO very important features.



The real elephant in the room here is the APPs, people like
to say Android is now catching up with the APP game, but from my recent
purchase of an iPad 2, it would seem, that is not as true as you may think.
When I saw the amount of apps there were that would aid me in my daily life I
almost **** a brick, then being an Android user I almost **** my pants again
because OMG “I HAVE TO PAY FOR THESE!?!?!?”



That is the mentality of an Android user, their OS is free, and
therefore the apps should be too. This is a huge deciding factor for companies
making some of the most successful apps on iOS to NOT port them over to Android
devices. They can’t make money, because iPhone
users are more likely to pay for an APP than Android users.




Accessories: Because
with the iPhone there is just ONE design every two years, it has the most
amazing offerings of cases, chargers, and accessories. Developers have more
time to create and polish them, making the choice the users decision, not
decided by which phone you have. By the time cool accessories come out for your
Android phone it has been replaced and the companies move on to the phone that
is dubbed “cooler” so they can make more sales.



So the iPhone 4S, has been dubbed a disappointment, but the
sales are clear so far: it is a success. And that has a lot to do with the fact
that they didn’t just upgrade the internals, they REALLY updated them, they already have one of the best cameras
regardless of “megapixels” and they just updated the hell out of it with some
seriously impressive features. These days who doesn’t use their phone as a main
camera now for everyday stuff?



“The best camera is the one you have with you” Chase
Jarvis




iOS 5 a HUGE
overhaul. Did it copy ideas from Android? Damn straight! But before you get
your panties in a bunch didn’t Android have to copy ideas from iOS to begin?
And I give both companies props for continuing the forward momentum. Siri while
may be fun to bag on, if it is what they say it is, is a HUGE advancement in
Voice operation. I actually hope the two companies continue to push each other
feature wise, so the user gets the rewards in the end.



[url=http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ZNouMoT-aP8/TpHlxhnQ00I/AAAAAAAABFM/PT5AQ_0y01Y/s320/GoogleSearch.png]Image[/url]I have a PC a Macbook Pro, and Ipad 2 and an Android phone,
but this time around I pre-ordered the iPhone 4S because I decided I was tired
of screaming at my OS when it would just do stupid ****, like drain my battery
in less than 5 minutes after a full charge, or lag in apps especially when
texting, and I realized the widgets, such as the google search bar, while cool just took up space on the screen
and drained battery life.



I like knowing I will always have the most up to date OS, my
phone will retain value, and I can upgrade every year instead of every month to
keep up.



Which brings me to my final statement



“Standing in line” aka Brand Loyalty



[url=http://iphonewhatever.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/donotcross-300x300.jpg]Image[/url]For the release of the “small update” iPhone 4S, there is
already 2 people standing in line at the 5th avenue Apple Store in
NYC for 13 days, they began camping out 2 weeks before the launch of the phone
to secure their spot as FIRST to get their new device!



Disney capitalized on this well, they know they have good
rides, so they setup lines that people don’t want to stand in, but will to go on
a crazy adventure that lets them forget about the line in the first place.



I took a trip down there to see if they were crazy, but to
my surprise they were normal every day people with jobs, who just wanted to
experience the phenomenon of an Apple Launch event as first.



This desire to stand in line and be first
is something that is important to the iPhone’s reputation; they feel having the
phone first is tangible rather than fleeting. And in a world of txts and emails
and lack of social interaction, yet filled with it, feeling a connection with
your device, as strange as it sounds is important. You will use it every day,
so you better like it.



Check out their ongoing wait adventure here: http://iphonewhatever.com/





The brand name association with Android is diminishing even
more with each phone released as the companies who make them are having a power
struggle to have the best phone. With Android you have Motorola who came into
the picture as the front runner with the original Droid, but quietly from the
darkness emerged a little company called HTC who overlaid their own UI on the
Android device and quickly overtook Motorola, now it seems Samsung is going for
their own attack as a prominent Android manufacturer, but when I, the consumer,
go to the store, I am doing the opposite of what I should when shopping for a
new Android phone; I am looking at specs of the all the different “brands” of
Droid. Checking their specs and listening to the reps telling me which has
1080p or not, when in the end it is about the user experience,
if the 1080p looks like **** with 9827 megapixels then why did I choose it over
the other brand? I like choice, but I don’t want the choice to be a sacrifice,
1080p for lack of an awesome UI by HTC, etc.



Conclusion:



[url=http://www.thenewtechblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Apple-Vs.-Android.jpg]Image[/url]

Word of mouth is the best AD campaign anyone can ask for.
With the iPhone you know what to tell your friends, with Android, you are still
not quite sure what it is or which phone to suggest to them, because your phone
is a month old and the newest Android might be coming out next week, and trying
to explain to someone that if they wait a month they might get the latest software upgrade, is like telling a 3 year old
he might be able to watch TV if he
eats his vegetables.



So I feel with the offering of an affordable iPhone 4 with
pretty good specs still today, due to a polished OS with iOS5, and the much
faster iPhone 4S, Apple is the winner. Not because I am a fanboy but because it
just makes more sense to get the device that doesn’t give me buyers remorse a
month later and with new features like BBM type services and uniformed apps
over the platform I will want my friends to have it too. It has a community
feel and congruency therefore I am more likely to suggest it to my friends so I
can interact with them on the device.

****** HTML to BBCODE converter full article in the link in my sig. Article is called First in Line First In Line - iPhone 4S VS Android
That's a very verbose way of convincing us that Apples influence has taken over...

Steve Jobs' imprint is everywhere, especially apparent amongst his vocal subjects.

Both amazing and very revealing...
 
Said good battery life? The battery life is superior to Android and Windows in real world use. Even with custom Roms.

iOS just works. The regular hiccups you have on Android like the inevitable lag or 3 steps to complete one task, where it would be one on iOS.

You mean like adjusting brightness, or toggling wifi/3g/airplane mode, or one touch on a contact shortcut to call/sms/email, or attaching a photo to an email...???

There are lots of reasons why the iPhone is better than any Android offering (screen resolution, gpu power thus the smoothness of operation, ecosystem, better app selection, better camera...)....but "less steps to complete a task" generally isn't true.
 
What makes people get an iphone despite better specs on Other devices
Some guys are always looking for the greener grass on the other side of the fence,
Thinking, "I want a girl with 'better specs'".
But they'll look back with regret...
For dumping their nice, but not-the-head-cheerleader girlfriend...
When they learn the one with the "better specs"
Is a real b!tch to live with.


:apple:
 
Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 5_0 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/534.46 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.1 Mobile/9A334 Safari/7534.48.3)

As far as I know. The iPhones gpu is the fastest on the market (yes even faster than the Mali400 on the gs2). The display has the highest resolution of any phone released. The battery life is far superior to almost all android phones and the camera is better than any android or wp7 phones. It has a lower clocked CPU than the gs2 but still runs smoother more reliably and the lower clock speeds save a lot of battery. Besides 4g I'm not missing out on any thing with my iPhone 4s. I have more support from the manufacturer than any android device out there. By that I mean I won't have to worry about buying a new phone and never receiving and updat for it. People give the iPhone a lot of crap for being behind the curve on release when it really never is.


Amen to this post
 
What phone has better specs? People are bitching about the new flagship android device already because they cheaped out on the screen. I haven't seen a single android device as sleek as the 4/4S. It's like comparing a plastic HP laptop to a unibody MacBook Pro. The camera on the 4S once again seems to be best in class. And I've heard that the lag has been so bad in the past that cameras were practically useless on android devices. When I got my first iPhone, the 3GS, there were definitely things to complain about in the iPhone world. Now ever since the 4 and iOS 4 I'm perfectly happy. And the app situation is a pretty big deal as well.
 
The design, experience and maturity of the iOS ecosystem. iTunes also makes it easy to manage content. iCloud may also be a factor.

That's it for me also... iMac at the office..MacBook Pro at home and my phone all work in tantrum. If I make an appointment it shows up on all of my devices, it's the total ego system.
 
One additional factor for me. I hate gmail. And their calendars. Yes, I know there are lots of work arounds but bleh. I want something smooth and elegant. My work email/ical/address book just work well between my mac and my iPhone.
 
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