R13...
Honorary Master
It did? How? Where? Shouldn't you wait for the next iPhone before declaring their fear of innovating?It's like the antenna-gate saga scared all innovation/risk-taking out of Apple.
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It did? How? Where? Shouldn't you wait for the next iPhone before declaring their fear of innovating?It's like the antenna-gate saga scared all innovation/risk-taking out of Apple.
My biggest problem with the iPhone - and iPad - lies not in the physical design but in the too slow evolution of iOS. As a long-time iOS user now playing with Android Jelly Bean roms iOS feels ancient, like and OS designed for an older generation of devices and users. Yes, Android is not a rock-solid as iOS, but it is FUN. One can mess around and make the device look and operate very differently. Yes, there is jailbreaking iOS ... but it is nothing like what can be done with Android (in my experience).
Its all about practicality, in my eyes the build quality of a phone is about the durability of the phone and the visual appeal of the phone. If that can be achieved with rubber then by all means I would take that over a fully metal phone that shatters upon any physical impact.
It did? How? Where? Shouldn't you wait for the next iPhone before declaring their fear of innovating?
I think Apple need to worry about the shareholders more than customers. If the next Iphone is not groundbreaking or rather they cannot convince them that it's groundbreaking expect the share price to plummet
The Android folk should sincerely be wishing the iPhone 5 is great.
Samsung is upping the ante and Apple must reciprocate - that's how we all gain. Having one dominant player, be it Apple or Samsung, is bad for everyone.
My biggest problem with the iPhone - and iPad - lies not in the physical design but in the too slow evolution of iOS. As a long-time iOS user now playing with Android Jelly Bean roms iOS feels ancient, like and OS designed for an older generation of devices and users. Yes, Android is not a rock-solid as iOS, but it is FUN. One can mess around and make the device look and operate very differently. Yes, there is jailbreaking iOS ... but it is nothing like what can be done with Android (in my experience).
Those refreshes are exactly what happened with the iPhone 3 to 3Gs. In fact the iPhone only changed form at iPhone 4 all the way from the first iteration. The market seemed quite happy with it.iPhone 4 to 4S and iPad 2 to iPad "3" ... booooooring. Siri can't be take sirious ... like asking a waiter at Wimpy for an explanation of Higgs-boson ... you might get lucky and get a physics student as waiter, but the chances are very very small. The new iPad to come - as per latest rumours - will have small changes in heat management and the moving of the microphone.
My biggest problem with the iPhone - and iPad - lies not in the physical design but in the too slow evolution of iOS. As a long-time iOS user now playing with Android Jelly Bean roms iOS feels ancient, like and OS designed for an older generation of devices and users. Yes, Android is not a rock-solid as iOS, but it is FUN. One can mess around and make the device look and operate very differently. Yes, there is jailbreaking iOS ... but it is nothing like what can be done with Android (in my experience).
I want rock solid because for me the iPad is more of a tool than a toy which is why when it comes time to update the OS I try to wait and see what problems there might be that will affect me. I get that for some the look is more important than the experience though.My biggest problem with the iPhone - and iPad - lies not in the physical design but in the too slow evolution of iOS. As a long-time iOS user now playing with Android Jelly Bean roms iOS feels ancient, like and OS designed for an older generation of devices and users. Yes, Android is not a rock-solid as iOS, but it is FUN. One can mess around and make the device look and operate very differently. Yes, there is jailbreaking iOS ... but it is nothing like what can be done with Android (in my experience).
Apparently that's half the fun in the android ecosystem.If the way Android (ICS) crashes, hangs and randomly restarts on my Asus Transformer is any indication, I NEVER want this on a phone, thanks.
Having had 3 iPhones (2, 3, 3s) and now 3 Androids (2 x s2, ace) in my family, and having being the designated installer/maintainer I am the one giving a damn.
Not to be a fan boy, but iPhones definitely have MUCH better build quality than the rest. I've watched several other people go through 2 or 3 or even 4 Samsungs or HTCs during which time my iPhone has remained as pristine as the day it was unboxed and just as functional if not more than the competition.
Apparently that's half the fun in the android ecosystem.
iPhone 4 to 4S and iPad 2 to iPad "3" ... booooooring.
That and sifting through countless POS home made apps and buggy clones untill you find one that works properly on your phone.
I like the S3, but my ecosystem, I plug my iPhone into my car, the sound system can handle the iPhone's playlists etc. I get home and I control my Apple TV using my iPhone. I can also watch the family videos, TV Series and Movies from my iTunes library. I buy most of my series from iTunes, and lately movies too, so all of it works brilliant on the iPhone, the S3 won't connect to any of it, or would it?
Also S3 users, do you use the standard rom or load a custom rom? I hate the way the Android vendors 'make the ui better', they all suck in my experience, HTC sense on my DesireHD was disgusting, hated it, so I loaded C7 on that one.