Android 5.0 'Lollipop' vs. iOS 8: More Similar Than Ever 178
Nerval's Lobster writes With the debut of Android 5.0 (also known as Lollipop, in keeping with Google's habit of naming each major OS upgrade after a dessert), it's worth taking a moment to break down how the latest version of Google's mobile operating system matches up against Apple's iOS 8. After years of battle, the two are remarkably similar. So while nobody would ever confuse Android and iOS, both Google and Apple seem determined to go "flatter" (and more brightly colored) than ever. Whether or not you agree with their choices, they're the cutting edge of mobile UX design. The perpetual tit-for-tat over features has reached a climax of sorts with Lollipop and iOS 8: both offer their own version of an NFC-powered e-wallet (Apple Pay vs. Google Wallet), a health app (Apple's Health app vs. Google Fit), car-dashboard control (Android Auto vs. CarPlay), and home automation. That's not to say that the operating systems are mirror images of one another, but in terms of aesthetics and functionality, they'll be at near-parity for most users, albeit not for those users who enjoy customizing Android and hate Apple's "walled garden." (Related: Lots of reviews are popping up for Google's new Nexus 6, one of the first phones to come with the newest Android; TechCrunch's is typical, in that reviewer Greg Kumparak has high praise for the Lollipop UI, but found himself nearly dropping the device because of its size and texture.)
When will I get it on my Nexus 5? (Score:1)
When will I be able to get and install the OTA update for my Nexus 5?
No, I'm not interested in downloading and installing the new image manually. I just want to do a quick update through the normal update mechanism.
Re:When will I get it on my Nexus 5? (Score:5, Informative)
The OTA started yesterday. They do a staged roll out for all these updates. So you should get it within a few days.
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If you're in a hurry to see the performance improvements over the UI improvements, you can go ahead and switch from the Dalvik JIT to the ART precompiled runtime now:
http://www.cultofandroid.com/5... [cultofandroid.com]
(you may want to have a charger nearby while recompiling all of your apps, though)
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I don't get these staged updates.
With iOS, Apple announces a new OS update, and makes it available to all, for all compatible devices, simultaneously. Given the hundreds of millions of compatible devices this must be a massive logistical problem, yet everyone that's interested gets the OS update immediately, the downloads tend to work just fine, and everyone tends to be happy.
With Android, Google only makes builds for Nexus devices. One would have thought that given the relatively small numbers of devices
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I assume the number of people clicking and waiting are probably pretty few. Normal users probably don't realize a big update is coming until the day the notice pops on their phone. For the rest of the people, you can sideload the update easily. I don't think it is perfect, but it isn't the end of the world. The benefits of a staged roll out shouldn't be over looked either. Look at the issues Apple had with their first update to iOS 8 and having to pull it after so many already installed it. A staged r
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I'm not in a hurry if the look of the new gmail app is a sign of what's coming.
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I'm not in a hurry if the look of the new gmail app is a sign of what's coming.
What?
But it has a handy little write new email to no specific person button in the bottom right, where your thumb is. I start writing emails to no-one in particular all the time! Okay, maybe not...
But at least all the other features have been optimized to be as far away from your thumb as possible (assuming you're right-handed), in the top left corner. But you can also swipe right from the left edge to open the menu, and this will only sometimes cause you to delete emails from your inbox...
Actually, maybe y
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Re:When will I get it on my Nexus 5? (Score:4, Informative)
Depends on the software. Typically, you have an OS, cache, and data partition. Manual updates of Cyanogenmod through Clockwork have wiped the OS partition, leaving the others in tact. A desktop update using the boot loader shell and instructions might instruct the phone to wipe data and cache, thus performing a factory reset.
It comes down to your phone's boot loader, mostly. The OS image itself is just a file that gets unpacked and dumped onto the OS partition; but if your upgrade software unpacks the OS image, wipes the internal ROM, repartitions, and installs the new OS image, it'll wipe your data. If your upgrade software wipes the OS partition and unpacks, you get an upgrade without a factory reset.
I've had OTA upgrades (Motorola Cliq) wipe the data partition. The only way to know is to find someone else who's done it.
Re:When will I get it on my Nexus 5? (Score:4, Informative)
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Flashing the factory image will do a wipe if you follow the instructions on Google's download page because it has you unlock the bootloader, which causes the device to erase itself. There's also a command argument in flash-all.bat that causes a wipe.
Usually someone will capture and post a link to the OTA download (who knows why Google won't just post it themselves...) and you _can_ "sideload" that fairly easily using adb without losing all your user data. This is by far the easiest method if you don't need
Re: When will I get it on my Nexus 5? (Score:1)
But flashing it manual will wipe all the data whereas the OTA installation won't, so the former will be a more time consuming process in the end. That's why I'm waiting - simply too little time.
Why the troll? (Score:2)
That's not to say that the operating systems are mirror images of one another, but in terms of aesthetics and functionality, they'll be at near-parity for most users, albeit not for those users who enjoy customizing Android and hate Apple's "walled garden."
What's with the pointless troll of Apple users? If they want to compare that's fine but why be a dick about it? If you like Android then use it. If you like IOS use that. Picking one or the other doesn't make one a better person but flinging monkey poo at someone who made a different technology choice doesn't speak highly of one's character. (yeah go ahead - insert "you must be new here" comment here)
Want to talk parity? Android is a walled garden too - just with different types of walls. There are co
Re:Why the troll? (Score:4, Informative)
That's a strange definition of "walled garden" - network crapware? True you can't uninstall some of it, but you're still free to install whatever you want, and from non-Google stores with absolutely no effort what-so-ever... Hell, some of those devices don't even come with Google Play installed by default, so if it is a walled garden, those devices aren't even in it.
And complaining that people have a choice in what level phone they want? Jesus.
Which doesn't reclaim internal storage (Score:2)
network crapware? True you can't uninstall some of it, but you're still free to install whatever you want
Which means non-Nexus devices will have fewer GB of available internal storage than advertised. Some carriers have been caught shipping a multi-hundred-megabyte game in the unmodifiable partition.
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Which means non-Nexus devices will have fewer GB of available internal storage than advertised.
What shipping device (including iOS and Windows devices too if you like) has as much GB of available internal storage as advertised?
If you don't have root it is a walled garden (Score:2)
True you can't uninstall some of it, but you're still free to install whatever you want, and from non-Google stores with absolutely no effort what-so-ever...
If you don't have root access available to you straight out of the box and supported by the manufacturer then it is a walled garden pretty much by definition. The only question is how high the walls are. Saying the walls are lower than the one's Apple has is pretty much the definition of damning with faint praise.
True you can't uninstall some of it, but you're still free to install whatever you want, and from non-Google stores with absolutely no effort what-so-ever...
Those devices invariably come with some phone vendor version of a walled garden that is even less attractive than Google's version. See Amazon Fire for a great example.
And complaining that people have a choice in what level phone they want?
Who complained about that?
Unknown sources on Fire OS (Score:2)
Those devices invariably come with some phone vendor version of a walled garden that is even less attractive than Google's version. See Amazon Fire for a great example.
The last time I tried a Kindle Fire tablet, it had the same "Allow installation of applications from unknown sources" checkbox that virtually all* Android phones and tablets have. All an app's publisher has to do is make the app available as an APK. Is Fire Phone more restrictive?
* Except for the first few months of AT&T-branded Android phones. And even these tend to have an OTA update to restore the checkbox, a CyanogenMod port, or both.
Re:Why the troll? (Score:4, Informative)
Aside from Amazon devices (which use a forked version of Android), pretty much all Android devices are not a walled garden. Yes many are locked to a carrier, or have preinstalled apps you can't delete. But on the vast majority of them you can simply go to the settings, check the option to "allow installation from unknown sources," and you are outside the walls.
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Until you want to do something which requires root.
And then you realize the walls are still there.
If it's so damned open and free, provide me with a factory method of rooting the device.
I'm not quite ready to risk bricking my tablet. And I'm betting the latest update will make it even harder to root, not easier.
And, really, having preinstalled apps
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Exactly.
Sure, my Nexus 7 tablet will allow me to sideload apps.
But there are some apps which want to give me functionality Google won't which would require me to root the device. Like granular permissions control.
Sorry, but if I have to risk bricking the device in order to root it, where's this vaunted openness of Android? It isn't there by default if I don't already have root access to my phone.
My wife's Nexus 5 phon
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> My wife's Nexus 5 phone? The only texting app is Google's hangouts .. which means I assume all text messages are handed off to Google
Ignoring for a moment all the hundreds of text messaging apps in the Play store, your assumption is wrong.
In fact, pretty much everything you said comes down to "I have no idea, but I assume...", followed by an incorrect assumption.
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yup. lots of texting apps. Just like lots of flashlight apps. All of the ones in the first 10 pages of results want access to your address book, text messages, wireless settings, blah blah blah ...
I have both a Nexus5 and an Iphone 4S... It's not all peaches and cream over here in Android-land and it's not all fuzzy slippers and hot chocolate in iOS land either...
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no you idiots. I'm complaining about a flashlight app wanting access to my text messages.
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And then there's the constantly trying to get me to change my account to Google+. I don't want Google+ either, stop trying to shove it down my throat.
If you actually tried an Android phone, you would realize how laughable everything you said is. Literally not one thing you said is true. Congratulations.
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Now, feel free to explain to me how that is not freedom, and how the competition is?
Troll harder.
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Android devices have walled gardens, and it is up to the customer to choose how high the walls are, and if they get a key to the gate.
On one hand, you have the flagship Samsung phones which for even just root, it took a bounty and a heavyweight iOS jailbreaker to just punch a hole past Knox... and that's not even a bootloader unlock. On the other hand, you have the Nexus line of devices which allow full access with just a "fastboot oem unlock" command, and HTC devices which unlock with a key obtained from
Jalbreak = Evidence of walled gardens (Score:2)
Android devices have walled gardens, and it is up to the customer to choose how high the walls are, and if they get a key to the gate.
Really? I'm not aware of a single Android device that gives you root access straight from the manufacturer. If you don't have root then you don't have complete choice regarding the height of the walls. If a jailbreak of the phone is ever required to do something then that is pretty much de-facto evidence that a walled garden exists.
One has to do a little bit of research buying a device. GPE (Google Play Experience) devices tend to be unlockable, and run with minimal crapware.
Minimal barriers != No barriers. You might have some extra choices available to you but let's not pretend Android is FOSS.
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Really? I'm not aware of a single Android device that gives you root access straight from the manufacturer.
Really? The guy just explained that the manufacturers support custom firmware installation on several classes of device, and you're still trying to twist it into your walled garden argument? Quit being a tool.
"tit for tat", seriously? (Score:1)
How long did it take Apple to allow custom keyboards?
Widgets, does Apple (finally) support them?
What about widgets on the lock screen?
Did Apple stop using rectangular icons with rounded corners?
And well, it sure goes both ways:
When will Android ask me about an App trying to access my contact list?
Did Google start always asking for a password when buying/installing things like Apple does?
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And where can I obtain this "tat" people speak of?
Re:"tit for tat", seriously? (Score:4, Informative)
Originally tit for tat was a stylised way (ie slang) for saying "this for that". (Interestingly "titfer" became rhyming slang for a hat).
The word 'tat' is also used colloquially in the UK to describe something of poor quality (I believe it came from something falling to tatters). Something described as 'cheap tat' is usually near to wothless / meretricious rubbish.
How well this applies to mobile operating systems is left to the reader to decide :-)
Where to get a tattoo (Score:2)
Re:Where to get a tattoo (Score:4, Informative)
Depends on the tat ... I've got a nude pinup tat ... I'm 100% guaranteed to see tits. ;-)
In general, however, it may not get you any closer to actually touching any real ones.
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When will Android ask me about an App trying to access my contact list?
Is this a trick question? "Now".
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The ironic thing is that with either CyanogenMod or XPrivacy installed, Android will prompt on first use of a permission (contact list, phone, camera), and even allow it just for a certain period of time.
I think both ecosystems feed from each other. Android's NFC is useful since HID card readers can use it, so it can be used either instead of a badge, or as a backup in case someone forgets their ID.
Haters Gonna Hate (Score:5, Insightful)
I have an iPhone, but I also have an Asus Android tablet. I find advantages and flaws in both, and I use each device to its own strengths.
I also need to say that I was recently in an Apple store and found the iPad mini's screen to be very nice, much sharper than my Asus, but then again, the Asus was very cheap.
For casual browsing and making snide comments on facebook, it's perfectly fine. With a blutooth keyboard, it's even a nice SSH terminal. I don't do high-end computing on my tablet, and my phone is pretty much relegated to text messages, phone calls, photos, and the occasional need to access an app in an emergency. I'm not glued to my screen like most other people I know.
Android and iOS are both 'ok' -- neither is perfect, but frankly, the religious wars about operating system on your phone reminds me of the chatter between Atari users and Commodore users on Bulletin Board systems (showing my age here!).
Code signing: Apple, Commodore, Atari (Score:2)
Android and iOS are both 'ok' -- neither is perfect, but frankly, the religious wars about operating system on your phone reminds me of the chatter between Atari users and Commodore users on Bulletin Board systems (showing my age here!).
But did Atari or Commodore actively attempt to prevent people from creating and running programs on their computers? If I recall correctly, both Commodore and Atari shipped with BASIC interpreters that could CALL native code. Apple's code signing policy resembles that used by Atari for its 7800, Lynx, and Jaguar consoles, not that used for its 400, 800, and ST computers. Just as unsigned carts for the 7800 ran in 2600 mode, unsigned apps for iOS run in Safari.
If that matters to you then don't buy an iDevice. (Score:4, Insightful)
The manufacturer of my microwave actively prevents people from creating and running programs on it--that doesn't stop me from eating popcorn.
There are reasonable reasons to want a walled garden device (do a Google image search for a pie chart of the percent of mobile malware out there by platform, iOS doesn't even show up) and there are reasonable reasons to want something you can tinker with. Guess what? the market provides both choices and you get to pick one. Isn't this supposed to be about choice?
99.8% of all mobile malware is on platforms (Score:2)
which have a "well buried switch"--basically 0% of all malware is on iOS. It looks like the iOS strategy works pretty well and it looks like, thus far, you have been proven to be completely wrong that "one platform can provide both".
It's almost as if the company that's worth $600B understands what their customers want better than you do. Weird.
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Malware on Android exists for the following reasons:
First and biggest reason: it has a massive market share. If iOS had Android's market share, you better believe it'd have more malware.
Second biggest reason: Google kinda sucks at curating their app store compared to iOS. This has nothing to do with sideloading. They let far too much malware into the Google Play store thanks to their policy of reporting bad apps rather than actively prescreening apps as rigorously as Apple does. Google really needs to get b
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Evolution of tech (Score:1)
When anything become a commodity with little room for innovation like we have now between iOS and Android, something invariably pops up.
Hurry up Firefox OS
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Little room for innovation in phones? Given the speed of improvement what would lots of innovation look like to you? Me thinks your expectations need to be reset a tad.
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Not just phones, but there's plenty of room for innovation in almost any commodity. RAM has been a commodity for a long time now, but there's still a ton of innovation going on - the new DDR4 standard bringing on faster speeds, LP and LV RAM lowering power requirements, manufacturing process improvements leading to lower prices, etc. Apparently those kind of extremely complex feats of creative engineering are just too boring to notice.
What ecosystem do you want? (Score:1)
Today its more about the ecosystem then what OS is better. I have used everything from Android, Windows mobile, IOS and even some RIM devices. All of which work well but of course some lack apps or services that people need. When I bought my iPhone I had already chosen not to succumb to being locked into another ecosystem. I came from Android and yet much of my applications, backup, and services were very much separate from the OS. They were also platforms neutral and when I switched to the iPhone they all
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One thing I wish more devs would do is the universal IAP unlock. I have a couple games that have this and its awesome. Instead of having to buy the game outright on apple/android store, you get the free version. Then log in to your games account from android/ios/web/pc/whatever version you have, pay for the IAP to unlock the full version which then gets associated to your game account, and your done. Now you have the full version available on any platform
Any time I see that option on a game/app even if I
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One thing I wish more devs would do is the universal IAP unlock.
This use of in-app purchases appears to be forbidden by Apple's App Store Review Guidelines [apple.com]:
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Yea Ive had some dev's say that, and then those exact same devs turn around and do that exact thing. I.e. ticket to ride. The IAP's for android and steam activate together based on your TTR account, the iOS does not. However their game smallworld2 had IAP from another bundle (just like TTR) that activated based on game account and so activated on all products.
Meh... the hardware is lame .... (Score:1)
Every review I'm reading for devices capable of running Android 5.0 complain about the devices themselves. The new Nexus 9 tablet? Flimsy plastic feel to it ... nowhere near as solid with the sense of quality of construction you'd get with a new iPad. The Nexus 6 phone? Much more expensive than previous versions and again, that cheap feel to it that makes you wonder if it's worth the price.
I think it's great we have options that both compete to ensure they're not leaving out good features. But right now,
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Cutting Edge .. bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)
> Whether or not you agree with their choices, they're the cutting edge of mobile UX design.
As an UX expert, this "flat design" is NOT cutting edge. It is retro gaudy.
i.e.
Windows 1.0 vs Windows 8 [amigaspirit.hu]
It is like these idiot UI/UX designers tossed _everything_ we have learnt about WIMP for the past 20 years right out the window.
There is _nothing_ wrong with skeuomorphism when it is used in balance.
This flat design so that users no longer have visual clues as what is a (dynamic) button and (static) text is idiotic and retarded. The primary job of a UI is NOT to help, not hinder.
The gaudy colors are just the icing on the rotten cake.
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> The primary job of a UI is NOT to help, not hinder.
Obviously, it should read:
> The primary job of a UI is NOT to hinder, but to help.
Oh yeah? (Score:2)
Yeah, well, that's just, like, your opinion, man.
A button is no longer a button because it was never a button in the first place.
UI design was mouse-focused for about 25 years, and the UI design of smartphones just used it as a starting point. I'm glad to see it move on.
When I poke at a word I am poking a word on a screen with my finger, not a button. Why should it be dressed up in the clown makeup of a button? Position, context, color, precedent, and the name of the thing itself are all strong indicator
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Because you missed the point about _good_ UI.
*Good* UI doesn't conflate the issue between Signal and Noise.
if your brain wastes time trying to figure out WHAT you can and can't click on the UI designer has fucked up.
We use color, textures, drop-shadows, and skeuomorphism to all help provide _visual clues_ for the user.
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Actually, from my point of view, it's you who is missing the point. UI does not exist in a vacuum, it exists in a context of history, because the end user is a moving target.
The biggest example that comes immediately to mind for me is in the web browser. Back in the 80's, no one expected to be able to encounter a random place in a document with some stylistic emphasis, that when prodded with a mouse, would cause the computer to display a different document. That functionality was reserved for very clearl
WebOS (Score:2)
I think Lollipop was influenced much, much more by WebOS than it was by iOS. Makes it glaringly obvious why they made that patent agreement with LG a few weeks ago.
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As a former Pre owner and webOS fan, I'd like to hear more about why you think so.
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Well, first of all, I have to say that I haven't actually used Lollipop yet (Moto X 2013, so it shouldn't be too long a wait), and I am going off of reviews I have read. There are elements of the new Material Design that remind me a lot of WebOS. The biggest thing is the touch ripple, something I have never seen other than on my old WebOS HP Touchpad. The Lollipop lock screen notifications also look very familiar, and the new Overview function, with it's stack of cards, is practically ripped out of WebOS
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I think Lollipop was influenced much, much more by WebOS than it was by iOS. Makes it glaringly obvious why they made that patent agreement with LG a few weeks ago.
I would agree with this, but the comparison between Android and IOS is more to do with IOS looking more and more like Android in the last 4 releases.
IOS 3 and 4 looked and behaved radically different to IOS 7, I would not be supprised if we find the IOS 9 or 10 UI had more in common with Android 4 than IOS4.
My sister changed jobs last month, handed in her Iphone 5 to her old job and got a Galaxy S5 at her new job... She had no difficulty moving between the two as the UI's perform the same these days.
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I went from Cyanogenmod 11 to Lollipop last night (Score:2)
I had forgotten how featureless the stock launcher is. Gads. I feel crippled. I also really liked CyanogenMod's Privacy Guard feature.
I will not miss the bugs of CyanogenMod, though, that's for sure.
I'll be searching for a replacement launcher ASAP. Any recommendations? I used to use ADW back in my Gingerbread/Froyo days...I'll have to see if it's been updated for Lollipop/ART.
Hi-res Displays Look Better with Flatter Designs! (Score:2)
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Cross can also mean "Wrong" or "No" in the west.
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Re: It's all about the haters (Score:2)
And people that already had gmail accounts, and people that wanted larger phones, and people that wanted keyboards.
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Re: It's all about the haters (Score:4, Insightful)
Correct. The only people who don't buy Apple products now are haters. Or maybe they don't want to pay a 50% markup for the Apple logo.
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Android might be just as bad I don't know don't own one but I'd add: Apple just being able to decide to remove an app that you used to have from the store because their latest shiny doesn't work well with it (even though all the older models do) or they decided to create hype for the next version of iOS by adding a feature that that app already does.
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You know what a logo is? Same as a brand - it's a promise of quality. For good or bad. If a product can demand a 50% mark up because of a given logo, it's because the logo has built up a significant level of trust in the high quality of the product, either directly or by word of mouth.
Not exactly. While there is some truth to that analysis, it completely ignores the much larger effects of marketing and fashion. A Rolex doesn't cost 3 orders of magnitude more than a Chinese knockoff because it delivers 3 orders of magniute as much "quality"; the price is a reflection of fashion rather than functionality. Similarly, a basic Starbucks coffee costs 2-3 times as much as a coffee at the local diner, but certainly doesn't deliver 2-3 times the "quality". And don't get me started on the absu
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Those limits work both ways. The sandboxing is great for security, but at the expense of flexibility.
On Android I can't have the Facebook app and refuse it access to my SMS messages. On iOS I don't have the option to give it access.
Re: It's all about the haters (Score:4, Informative)
Install AppOps on Android and you can refuse any app any permission.
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That's a feature that appeared officially in 4.3 and disappeared again in 4.4. Yes, it can be done now, but it means rooting your device. I was comparing default functionality between Android and iOS. Obviously if you root/jailbreak then almost anything is possible.
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Hence the option of being a smartphone refuznik. Third option : don't get any. Spyware reading SMS is ridiculous. On a PC or any web browsing device there are grave privacy problems (get tracked all to easily) but a minesweeper game doesn't read my e-mails at least.
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Can you get NFC tags working in IOS? Is there an app to cut the pricetag from "absurd" to reasonable, given that I can do far more with a Nexus 5 than an iPhone5, at roughly 1/2 the price?
Re: It's all about the haters (Score:5, Insightful)
And people who want something like OTG USB, NTFS support, general NFC support, wider device choice, lower price, wireless charging....
There are a lot of user groups that like android. Tinkerers tend to be one-- theres a lot of freedom with android that just isnt there with IOS. Everything Apple is doing in IOS8 was generally being done in android first. Some of us like the cutting edge.
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I think all the 5"+ craze is people that were late to the tablet game deciding that they want one device that can suit two purposes, to me you end up with an awkward phone (and I'm 6'3" so I can't imagine a little 5'2" person) and a tiny tablet for watching shows on. Neither great but better to some than dropping another $2-500 on a second device.
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I didn't hate Apple until they started their douchebaggery meritless lawsuits.
Before then I was indifferent as I found their products egregiously overpriced for what they were since they removed options to strip, e.g. mac pros to min. spec(which I would order then save 1000s adding my own RAM hdds GPUs etc.), removed easily user replaceable batts in notebooks, started soldering RAM on more and more products, etc. Just making them not only ridiculously overpriced but reinforcing that idiocy by forcing overp
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Google wallet is useless here in Canada. They don't seem interested in making it available outside the US. In fact, Google doesn't seem interested in Wallet at all and I expected them to abandon it by now.
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For those people, the experience on lower-end Windows Phone devices is usually better than the experience on lower-end Android devices......I suspect that's where MS will garner their greatest bump in marketshare.
An unlocked Lumia device for under $100 US ---- unsubsidized!!! And it's actually a decent phone for the money and doesn't suffer as much UI stutter as a knock-off Android device.
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I assume something better than the 520 has come out at that price point then, because I've got one of those for work and it's dire.
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I've had my S3 for a quite a while now too. Just put in a new battery a few weeks ago. What an improvement. Thankfully Samsung gave us the ability to order a 3rd party battery online and just pop it in. One of the many reasons I won't go with Apple and their unmaintainable design.
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Who has a Kit-Kat or Lollipop for dessert, seriously?
Agreed. Personally, I'm waiting for Android Napoleon [wikipedia.org] to come out.
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... and I'll be looking forward to "Nanaimo [wikipedia.org]" after that.
Hopefully they'll still be making bar phones at that time, and put off the transition to some wearable-in-your-face thing until "Pie"
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Nanaimo bars are great, except for the feeling you get after eating one that you're going to be sick.
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Living close to Nanaimo, I have had real Nanaimo bars. yes they are sweet, but no more so than any other dessert bar, and they have never made me sick....
Kit-Kats or Lollipops on the other hand, especially shortly after Halloween....
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Who has a Kit-Kat or Lollipop for dessert, seriously?
I would have preferred a Klondike Bar [wikipedia.org] to a Kit Kat.
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albeit not for those users who enjoy Apple's security and hate Android's extensive malware
Fans of iOS like to trot this out, but they've never really explained where this "extensive malware" is coming from. Is it on Google Play, Amazon Appstore, F-Droid, and other major app stores in countries that use the Latin alphabet? Or is it largely confined to pirate or Chinese stores that someone in North America or Western Europe isn't likely to encounter?
Re: (Score:2)
albeit not for those users who enjoy Apple's security and hate Android's extensive malware
Fans of iOS like to trot this out, but they've never really explained where this "extensive malware" is coming from. Is it on Google Play, Amazon Appstore, F-Droid, and other major app stores in countries that use the Latin alphabet? Or is it largely confined to pirate or Chinese stores that someone in North America or Western Europe isn't likely to encounter?
Further more, it's never actually been demonstrated that this "extensive malware" is widespread in any way, shape or form. In fact the worst thing they've been able to show is a fake app that might steal some of your personal data or show you ads. We're yet to get something really bad like a mass mailing worm, DDOS or cryptolocker.
Yep, I said "yet to", as long as there's money to be made and dumb users to install it, eventually it will happen. However with things like Masque on IOS, there's no guarantee
Viper mode (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Even Windows 3.1 had shaded UI elements!, you have to get back to Windows 2.x, before the 90s.