I've had the Droid Razr for about 6 months and have never seen any stuttering whatsoever. Guess it just depends on the phone. Has a real nice big screen too.
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I've had the Droid Razr for about 6 months and have never seen any stuttering whatsoever. Guess it just depends on the phone. Has a real nice big screen too.
It's now been 1 week with the Galaxy Nexus even though I do like the phone there are some issues.
1) I don't get Downcast, my all time favorite podcast app is not on Android. BeyondPod is ok and I bought the license for it but not as good as Downcast in my opinion.
2) My biggest gripe is the way this device handles bluetooth. The iPhone has separate volume profiles for different bluetooth devices and this device only has 1. I have a small bluetooth speaker at home and my car has bluetooth streaming. I kept my iPhone at full blast in the car and at about 50% on my bluetooth speaker so I had to make a universal adjustment. Also, I've had a few issues while playing music/podcasts and trying to answer a call or execute a voice command, this function is the pits on the Galaxy Nexus. As flawed as siri is she at least worked in my car.
3) The ability to easily manipulate the music app that is currently running without needing to unlock the phone is not entirely gone but not as clean of an implementation. Also, sometimes it just plain doesn't work. IOS you double tap the home button and play/pause/forward/back pop up for music manipulation.
4) Easy access to camera without needing to unlock the phone was nice on IOS. I think there is an app solution for this on android but I haven't really looked too hard for one.
5) Visual voicemail was tricky to setup, I basically set it up so when I don't answer my phone it forwards to my google voice voicemail and it works great. Still more tweaking than the average consumer would like.
7) App management in general is a bit more work but nothing terribly bad.
8) Backup and Restore. iCloud changed the game in this respect, I can simply tell my phone to restore from iCloud and pretty much every aspect of my phone is restored with little to no fuss, this includes app and folder placement. There is no such solution for Android, if there is I have yet to see it. Also, requiring someone to root for this purpose seems extremely silly. I just tried to erase and restore my Nexus 7 tablet and it didn't restore jack. I also bought Mybackup Pro which is a paid app and now am stuck with something useless, online storage is only through them and they charge extra monthly fees if you want more then 100MB storage.
Things I like:
1) Freedom to change any aspect of the phone or tablet I don't like. From keyboard to browser to mail client.
2) Widgets are a nice touch. I have a few of them now and they make looking stuff up like my appointments that day the weather and stock.
3) I have come to like the gmail client now that I have used it for a while and dolphin is an awesome browser that allows plugins.
4) Massive screen for viewing videos or using RDP.
5) Tight integration with google services which I use daily is great.
I feel I can make a decent conclusion of the people each platform will attract. Those of us in the know at least. I say “in the know” because the average user only cares about the basic functionality and app selection these days. Those of us that know the pros and cons tend to be a bit pickier.
Android user: Those of us that like to tweak things to no end and make sure everything works for me and only me. If I want to use the default apps that my device came with then great. If I don’t want to the that then I have options.
Where Android truly sucks: Simple backup and recovery.
Apple user: They like safe and tight integration of everything they have. Not a whole lot of tweaking here just accept what you get and roll with it.
Where IOS truly sucks: Customization
Where I sit? I can safely say I dabble in both camps at this point and see why someone would like one over the other.
Nabby,
Titanium Backup Pro is THE android backup software. Yes you need root, but honestly its a requirement on android to get the full use of the device.
I agree on Android being the only mobility OS I will use. Windows 8? Not a chance.
Anyway, I also had a Galaxy 10.1 with 4G from Verizon. While I liked the tablet, the battery life was awful. If I turned of 4G it was okay, but that kind of killed the point. Swapped it out for a Xyboard and am much happier. I will say that I saw a decrease in battery life after the ICS update. I never ran ICS on the Galaxy. Did they finally release it?
It depends on the phone, though. I had a Droid 2 that I was very happy with at stock, then upgraded to a Droid 3 and hated it. Why? Motorola put out the 2 as virtually plain vanilla, where the 3 got the MotoBlur treatment. My current phone is a Razr, that has some MotoBlur garbage, but not enough to make rooting it worth the hassle.
This is like all the people that say you have to jailbreak your iphone to get full use of it. It shouldn't be a requirement for anyone to do this. Am I totally against it? Not at all but the average consumer should not have to worry about this type of stuff. This is why backup and recovery is leaps and bounds ahead on IOS then it is on Android.
gotta disagree with both statements as someone who uses an galaxy nexus and iphone4 daily.
on android, you can use titanium backup and it will pretty much back up everything as well as on iOS... furthermore if you dont mind rooting, then you can use NANDROID backup and it will create a 100% perfect backup of your phone with one touch.
on iphone, if you dont mind jailbreak, you can customize it pretty much as well as (or even more) any android device. cydia makes it insanely easy to customize your iphone and be a power user on iOS
Sorry to bring this thread back to life but since I've been using the Galaxy Nexus for a while now, I feel I should chime in and say that I'm switching back to iPhone. As mentioned in my previous comparison, the things I do most day in and day out the iPhone just does better. What will I miss the most? Siftkey 3 keyboard, worth every penny spent on this third party keyboard. If you're not using it on your android device it is a shame. What I will miss the least? All the crappy music widgets that don't seem to work right for me, I'm looking at you pandora, spotify, and podcaster.
Also, I gave up on using voice commands on the Galaxy Nexus. If I have to check the phone to make sure it typed my text message properly or the music/podcast is not automatically paused when trying to execute a voice command then it is more or less useless.
As for the reply above, I was under the impression that titanium backup required root access, at least that is what the app says in the play store. If I am mistaken then that is a nice solution for people. In my comparison I just wanted to express my out of the box experience without rooting the device to attain full functionality.
The iPhone5 absolutely rocks. I love mine. Holding a Galaxy S3 in 1 hand and the iPhone5 in another, the S3 just feels like a toy. This iPhone is so flippin fast, and I love iOS6. Even if the maps need some work. It's awesome now as well that I have the holy trinity of MacBook/iPad/iPhone. Toss in the AirPlay/AirPrint and Apple TV and damn that is a fine combination. Stoked.
Edit~ And yes Titanium Backup requires root.
Congrats, we are officially apples ***** :-P. I agree with you that the iPhone 5 is a damn fine demonstration of great engineering. It isn't 4.65 inches like my galaxy nexus but everything works and works well. I'm thrilled to have my Bluetooth profiles back and Downcast is still the best podcast app out there. I know it's the simple things but it is what I use daily. The built in maps needs work but does anyone remember the google maps app in the first iPhone? It was terrible so it will take time to hammer out some bugs and expand the map details. I don't use maps that often so it doesn't impact me all that much. Also, as much as Siri gets made fun of it actually works well for me. As I mentioned before, I gave up on voice commands on the galaxy nexus.
I do miss swiftkey 3 but I'll live.
So for shits and giggles I rooted my Galaxy 10.1 tab and installed Jelly Bean 4.1.1 on it. It still absolutely sucks compared to my iPad3. It's an improvement sure, but it's no iOS. Video still sucks, it still stutters here and there. Personally I think anyone who thinks Jelly Bean is a real alternative to iOS has a much lower threshold for performance than myself, and a much greater willingness to accept minor issues.
With Apple, it really is true that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. This concept doesn't even exist on the Android side.
I agree with you on that. It happens when you have full control of the experience, ie hardware and software, as Apple does. As I mentioned before there are some areas that IOS falls short but there aren't enough for me to stick with Android for the long haul. The only thing I would like is to be able to change the default app on IOS for certain functions, keyboard and browser are the two things I would change on the iPhone at this point.
I'm glad I read this thread. I've been getting the "grass is greener" itch since my upgrade came up. I've had an iPhone 4 the last couple of years and was starting to wonder what the other side offered (RAZR MAXX HD and GSIII), but seems like iPhone 5 is the way to go. I think I'll get my mom on the iPhone train as well, she's been having problems with her Android phone locking up the past few months (Droid Pro from a couple of years back, refurb).
Nexus 4 > any iPhone.
I dunno why anyone would want to be trapped in the iOS BS. I hate Apple with a passion.
Don't hate.. Participate!
Seriously though each camp has its benefits. I'm on an iPhone 5 now and it does what I need. The Nexus experience was nice and the new Nexus 4 is a promising device, but the tight ecosystem integration with the phone and my Apple TV is relly convenient. I still have my Nexus 7 tablet which is awesome, I considered swapping it out for a iPad mini but will likely hold out for a Windows Surface. Had the opportunity to play with one in the store today and it was really nice experience. I still do not like Windows 8's new interface for desktop but on a tablet it makes a lot more sense.
Will wait for holiday sales to see if I get a surface this year or not.
For the record by biggest gripe on IOS is the inability to change out my keyboard. If I could get swiftkey on my iPhone 5 I would be the happiest camper alive. Voice dictation in my car is still 100 times better with IOS then it ever was with Android, even with Android 4.1 on my Galaxy Nexus.
It's not that I'm a fanboy it's just that I don't believe in how Apple does things. I also don't like how completely locked down their OS is or how everything they do is a designed money grab. At least Android is open and uses industry standards like micro usb. Apple is a terrible example for a technology company to follow.
Apple is the example that every technology company is trying to follow. Not just hardware either.
Back in the 90s there was this idea that open standards might actually win. Things like USB came into being. The Internet was born, and there was this fully decentralized network. Some 15 years later, we are actually back where we started before the Internet where a handful of players are trying to control entire verticals. In the consumer space you've got Microsoft, Apple, Samsung/Google and Amazon. Each one has created their own platform, and each one is pretty much fully locked down. Android appears "open", but it's really not. The Google Play Store is the only real store. The Dalvik VM is not the same as the standard Java VM. Google took the Java and said, "We're doing are own thing, we don't care about the standard Java." Then Amazon came along and took Android and said, "We're doing our own thing. We don't care about the standard Android." If everyone starts their own standard, and none of them are interoperable, then they aren't standards.
We tried standards. They didn't work. For the better part of a decade the only "standard" was whatever Microsoft decided, and software was quite stagnant.
And we've got the same kind of closed structure on the Internet side of things. More and more of the Internet is controlled by Google, Amazon, Rackspace and potentially Microsoft's Azure. 10 years ago there really was no single point of failure on the Internet. Today, when a Google, Amazon or Rackspace datacenter goes down for a few hours large parts of the Internet grind to a halt.
The reality is, people are willing to give up control if it means a better overall experience. Trying to pretend like that isn't what's going on is kind of silly. No one cares about hardware specs or interoperability anymore. You can't buy into Google's ecosystem and then pretend like you care about openness just because they open source certain things. Most of Mac OS (and iOS, to some degree) are open source as well. That doesn't mean anything unless you are a software engineer. Your applications and media aren't any more portable with Android than they are with iOS or WP8. If anything, iOS may be the most interoperable by virtue of being the biggest. That is, I can watch my Amazon content on my iPad. I can't watch my iTunes content on my Kindle. Google Drive works my iPhone. iCloud doesn't work on my Nexus.
I'll buy a Nexus 4 simply because it's a bleeding edge smartphone for $349... UNLOCKED
I just got an iPhone 5 yesterday. The 64GB model. $850 (with AppleCare+)
I should be able to get $500 for my 4S, so not too bad.
Gotta say though, I'm pretty disappointed. It's insanely fast, sleek, thin and light…but the shape and aspect ratio are just wrong. Why in the hell are we using 16:9/10 in handheld devices? It's freaking terrible. It's awkward in your hand. If you hold across the bottom, you have to stretch to get your thumb to the upper corner.
Are there any other handhelds that are 3:2 that I don't know about? Everything seems to be 16:9/10. How am I the only one bothered by this? I have pretty average size hands…I think. What the hell do people with smaller hands do? How are 4.5" screen devices even selling? Who has hands large enough to use those with one hand?
I'm hoping they actually DO create an iPhone mini and bring back 3:2. 16:9 looks great when watching video, but it's absolutely terrible for everything else on a handheld. I'm tempted to go back to my 4S, but the LTE speed is pretty nice.
I'm currently using a 4" 16:9 Android device and it's definitely the upper limit of what I would deem comfortably usable. I think a large part of the reason why phones are getting bigger isn't that people want bigger phones, but that they want thinner phones and making the thing bigger is the only way to fit a large enough battery.
Yeah, 4/4s is perfect size for me, especially since I use it for GPS enabled fitness apps. 4.7/4.8in phones seem like they'd be a little bulky on my arm, and I won't even comment on the Note (although I know the size is meant more for productivity and note taking).