I phone vs android
Iphone vs Android......
Which one is BETTER......
Heyy , it's Nosheen, Today we are
going to be talking about “iphone versus android” hopefully with a fresh perspective. Usually, when you hear
somebody talking about this subject, you hear statements like android is more customizable than ios. Apple is more privacy
focused. Android split screen
support is really useful. Iphone's continuity features are super useful. Android
phones have usb-c a variety of devices always-on displays more customizable
looks cameras with more megapixels and the ability to side load apps. Iphones
get updates for half a decade have better more premium support, generally just
work have better resale value have more accessories to choose from and
generally just benefit from tighter integration of hardware and software and
the list goes on.
But, in this article, i actually
want to either dig a
little deeper or maybe just zoom out a
little further and cover some ground that's maybe more interesting or in some ways
maybe even more important.
Now, whether, you're considering an
android device or an ios device for your next phone, there's always more than
one reason to prefer one over the other. So, one thing's for sure there's no
reason to trash somebody else's treasure use what makes you happy and let other
people do the same.
So let me start then by mapping out
some of the top level strengths and weaknesses for each side. A top level
strength and weakness on the iphone side of things is that the iphone isn't a solitary product. It's deeply
interconnected with other complementary
apple products and
services. In fact,I would go so far as to argue that the iphone itself isn't
the real product that apple's trying to sell. Here instead, it's almost like, it's more of a
feature of apple's actual product. The famed apple ecosystem a deep ecosystem
can feel like a really great feature to somebody because the more apple devices
a person buys the more powerful and useful that ecosystem actually becomes.
The flip side though is that the costs associated with building out the apple ecosystem makes switching
away expensive maybe for some people prohibitively.
So now a top level
strength and weakness on the android side of things is its reliance on google's surveillance capitalism machine because at its
heart google is not in fact in the business of selling phones as much as it's
in the business of selling ads. So the more private information and experiences
google has access to the more personalized targeted and effective their operating
system apps services and yes ads can be now a more personalized experience can
feel like a really great feature to people because the more company knows about
you the more efficiently they can serve you.
The flip side though is that that
efficiency might come at the expense of true autonomy. If
your information is productized and potentially exploited on this platform. Can
you ever truly be certain that the products you're buying and the information
you're consuming is of your own free will? So pick your poison because there really is no
such thing as the perfect phone or the perfect company. I guess at the end of the
day a lot of your decision is gonna come down to which company you trust more
real quick.
Now with all the camera comparison,
the battery comparison test the side side-by-side benchmarking here on my article.
I actually have to say that i feel like comparing model versus model and feature
versus feature year after year is actually not quite as important as people
maybe assume. Obviously, when we're talking about phones features do matter but
the really good features the ones that aren't just gimmicks are fairly likely
to eventually get copied by the other side. We saw this when widgets
arrived on the iphone's home screen and we saw this when swipe controls came to
android devices and honestly, there are countless other examples. With new
iphones,I think you generally know what to expect year to year. Probably, a
more iterative approach to improving what's already a highly polished
phone that basically just works each year. I think it's pretty clear that apple's
mostly concerned with competing against itself and only itself instead of
trying to outdo the latest and greatest android devices out there. Even though,oftentimes
that is exactly what ends up happening.
Similarly,I think the majority of
android devices are basically fighting it out amongst themselves. Every year
mostly just trying to get a bigger slice of the overall android pie as a result
of that android manufacturers are incentivized to try to grab headlines by
being not just iteratively different but radically different. If they can and
sometimes this does lead to breakthroughs like periscopic zooms but other times
it also leads to gimmicks like glasses-free 3d screens. In either case what you would consider the core
smartphone experience rarely if ever changes year to year smartphones text. They
game, they browse, they email, they call, they take photos, they control smart
homes and a new form factor like a foldable or a more private browsing experience
like apple's private relay don't really do all that much to change the
fundamental smartphone experience and like i said the truly standout features
are likely to get copied by either side. Withinn a few generations now, over
the next decade or so a new platform is probably going to emerge that will
eventually replace smartphones probably some kind of ar or vr platform in
either case instead of just having tunnel vision and laser focusing on which
new phone has the coolest new feature every year. It might be good to take
things on balance and also consider what the future looks like and how happy
you're likely to be in three to five years because when you buy a new phone
you're not just buying a phone you're actually heading in a direction. So,If
you buy an iphone the direction that you're taking is heading straight into
apple's ecosystem and over the next three to five years you could really spend
a decent amount of money investing there. But,yeah you can get an apple watch
and a mac and unlock your mac with your apple watch and you can start an email
on your ipad and finish it on your iphone, you can send an intercom voice
message using your air pods that broadcast to the homepod minis around your house
and you can scan items from your iphone directly to apple notes on your mac,
you can get applecare for premium support, you can use imessage, you can set reminders
on siri on your apple watch that go off when you get out of your
carplay-enabled car your iphone is going to last you for more years if you wanted
to because you'll get updates for longer and then you'll be able to sell it for
a decent amount because apple products retain their value longer and you can do
it all while feeling more secure and private.
Mostly,maybe,yes the apple ecosystem
is great unless or until apple does something that you don't like like what if
someday apple decided to not scan for illegal images but to scan for people who
might belong to a certain religious group or any other group because i would
hate to see tools that were developed with a good purpose at heart turned into
weapons of intolerance.
Now,if you choose to buy an android device
you're buying into a future with more device options and with more opportunities
for customization. That's right you're going to be able to change your launcher
to put app icons wherever you want, you can root your phone and install custom
firmware, you can bypass google's app store and side load apps, you can use a
phone without a notch that has expandable storage and includes a headphone jack
or you can buy a phone for even less than 400, you can split your screen to
read an article and watch a twitch stream at the same time, you can use one
usbc charger to charge your laptop your switch and your android phone, you can
get that always on lock screen of your dreams, you can ask more complicated
questions of google assistant and expect smarter answers, you can get a phone
with a stylus and yes you can easily theme your devices yep all the options and
customizations are great until or unless well let's just say i shudder to think
about everything that google not to mention facebook while we're at it knows not
just about android users. But,honestly about the entire population does google
know you better than you know yourself. Do advertisers in the words of a
retired harvard business, school professor, surveillance. Capitalism is the
unilateral claiming of private human experience as free raw material for translation
into behavioral data. These data are then computed and packaged as prediction
products and sold into behavioral futures markets. She wrote a book a while
back and it caused a big stir because she goes on to say that these smart and
personalized devices and experiences that so many people enjoy might actually
in some way even be putting democracy at risk. Wow,it's like you might think
you're really informed but maybe you're only as informed as x y or z has
allowed you to be and you wouldn't know the difference.
Here's the way,I see it when you buy
an iphone, you're buying a puzzle piece and it's a real nice puzzle piece all
on its own but you're not gonna realize the full picture until you assemble the
rest of the puzzle i.e until you buy other apple products which all become so
much better together.
Likewise,when you buy an android
phone, you're still buying a puzzle piece but it's just the overall puzzle that
these pieces fit into is just much much smaller google's puzzle ecosystem is
growing, samsung's puzzle slash ecosystem is growing but neither one comes
anywhere close to matching the actual grandeur the gravity of apple's massive
puzzle slash ecosystem and smaller android manufacturers for the most part
really are just selling individual puzzle pieces mostly.
So decisions for me personally i
can just say i have chosen to go down the iphone and apple route at least for
the time being it served me really well in the past. I do feel like,I produced
high quality work using apple's products. Some people like one linus sebastian
might think of iphones as incremental expensive and boring but to me iphones
are reliable premium and ready to go right out of the box. I find that for me
personally i wouldn't be spending a whole lot of time customizing the grid
layout of my home screen or trying to overclock or under clock my phone for
gaming or battery performance. If,you're looking to get into the apple
ecosystem you can do so for as little as 399 $ with the iphone se and you could
even install all your favorite google apps if you really wanted to and even
create a shortcut to use google assistant in place of siri. You can essentially
turn your iphone into a kind of an android in a way while still being able to
take advantage of all the benefits of being in the apple ecosystem.
Now,if you're looking to switch
over to android you really can't pull all your apple apps over with you. The
only apple app that's really available over on the android side is apple music
but there are all kinds of phones at all kinds of price points with all sorts
of form factors with all sorts of manufacturer takes on what the best version
of android might look like. You get to choose from all of those now you do have
people out there saying things like android phones are categorically cheap or complicated but honestly those are just
stereotypes. There are plenty of expensive android devices out there made out
of really nice and premium materials and i found that the android experience can
be as complicated or as straightforward as you make it.
Alright well, that's it for this article,
i hope that you found this article to be different than you expected and different
from other.
Most informative
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