|
09-15-2017, 05:43 PM | #112 | |
Major General
3066
Rep 6,089
Posts |
Quote:
|
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-15-2017, 05:48 PM | #114 |
Lieutenant
50
Rep 407
Posts |
At the time the post you quoted was written, I believe the speculation was that the two phones would be called 7S and 8, or perhaps 7S and Edition, rather than the 8 and X that were released.
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-16-2017, 09:10 PM | #115 |
Brigadier General
4449
Rep 3,356
Posts |
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-17-2017, 08:54 AM | #116 |
Major
1056
Rep 1,268
Posts |
To put it in terms most of you would appreciate, image what it would be like if BMW did not control the complete design of their cars, someone made the engine, someone made their chassis and someone else did the suspension.
The overall experience would suck. When you have tight integration and design control you have a better overall experience. But most people can't not afford that so they buy what they can afford and deal with the bad experience. |
Appreciate
0
|
09-17-2017, 03:46 PM | #117 | |
General
906
Rep 1,004
Posts Drives: 2008 BMW 135i (E88 N54 6AT) Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: Sunshine Coast QLD Australia
|
Quote:
But, every time you get into a BMW, you need to get used to the individual car. The indicators are on the wrong side, the icons on the dash and location of the cruise control changes from car to car and model to model. Frankly, it's confusing when you first get into a new BMW, and they've got so many different models it must be very difficult for BMW to support every one. The iPhone is like a Tesla. It's fully integrated, sleek, shiny and fast. There are different specifications, but really only one "model". If you are happy doing exactly what the designer expects you to do with it, it's wonderful; but if you are bothered by it's shortcomings (like agility, battery life, charge time, value for money, etc) you can lump it or leave it. |
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-17-2017, 05:22 PM | #118 |
Brigadier General
4064
Rep 4,099
Posts |
Those analogies are bad.
The android analogy would have to include poor ram management, (while listening to the radio, the engine misfires and doesn't shift gears), Poor user experience (clunky transmission, bad ride quality) and more frequent reboots (car breaks down on the side of the road), a bad vinyl wrap job with advertising on it that you can't take off (Android manufacture skins), a key that opens the door, but doesn't start the car or do anything else like put the windows up/down (TouchID vs Android's fingerprint reader), etc etc.
__________________
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-17-2017, 05:59 PM | #119 | |
General
906
Rep 1,004
Posts Drives: 2008 BMW 135i (E88 N54 6AT) Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: Sunshine Coast QLD Australia
|
Quote:
It's hard to see the benefit of Android if you're going to buy a Samsung Galaxy S8, since they've progressively taken everything bad about the iPhone (inbuilt battery, no headphone jack, $1,000+ price point etc.) But unlike the iPhone, that's not _all_ android can do. But Samsung isn't the only hardware manufacturer on Android. I've got a LGV20, not only does the fingerprint reader work every time, it's also used for authenticating Fortinet 2FA and the android wallet. There are no memory management issues (because the hardware actually has enough RAM to run Android), it's got no LG branding because I know how to remove it (most users don't or don't bother) and it's got a swappable battery, headphone jack, and it'll happily flash my car with MHD/Carly etc. The problem with Android is that you actually have to know what you're doing to customize it to get the most out of it. Apple is fantastic for people who are happy doing things Apple's way; and can afford to buy & replace Apple hardware. But if you're comparing the experience on a J7, go and spend $250 on a second hand iPhone on eBay and use that for a week and compare it to the J7. THEN you'll understand why people, who don't customized android, choose "android". I'm actually not trying to change your mind and get you to buy an Android, if you like iPhone stick to it. It's easier, it's slick and you probably don't notice how restrictive it is. But I'm trying to say that almost all of the criticisms of Android I read on this board can be fixed by choosing an adequately-powered piece of hardware and customizing the OEM software image or loading a generic Android one. And to use another analogy, using the most popular Android phones as a yardstick for Android's capabilities (ie. entry level handsets & Samsung Flagship devices) is like driving a 328d and a E65 740Li then saying all BMW's are either underpowered cheap plasticy things, or high-powered land-yachts with a shitty user interface (iDrive v1). |
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-17-2017, 07:48 PM | #120 |
Major General
5076
Rep 6,883
Posts |
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-17-2017, 09:14 PM | #121 |
Brigadier General
6926
Rep 3,270
Posts |
everything is pushed to cloud, which drives me insane.
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-17-2017, 09:26 PM | #122 |
Banned
3225
Rep 2,385
Posts |
Or just buy an iPhone which you know already works, and don't have to bother with any of that crap. That's what people are saying. iPhone just "works".
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-17-2017, 11:10 PM | #125 | |
General
906
Rep 1,004
Posts Drives: 2008 BMW 135i (E88 N54 6AT) Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: Sunshine Coast QLD Australia
|
Quote:
If you have $1,000 to spend on your phone every 24 months and want something that will "just work", you can't go past an iPhone. IOS is better for most people, because it's completely locked down and is running on appropriately sized hardware. But it's expensive, it's restrictive, and Tim Cook seems hell-bent on grabbing all the worst features from Android, integrating them into the latest IOS releases, and forcing everyone to upgrade and just deal with it. But, the upside of that is that you can pick up any iPhone and it'll work exactly how you expect it to. But, if you only have $300 to spend on a phone, or you want a headphone jack, a removable battery or want to swipe to unlock your device - you really have no choice but to go Android. I was very happy with a hardware home button, a physical headphone jack and swipe-to-unlock, thank you very much! Android is not free of shortcomings, not least of which is initial usability - I use a LG V20, but whenever I pick up someone's Samsung Galaxy (also running the same major revision Android, but the Samsung version) - it's completely foreign. Really simple stuff like the 'back button', 'home button' and 'running-apps draw button' are different bloody icons from LG to Samsung. But what do you want? Easy, expensive, locked-down or flexible and available on any budget? Android is better for some people because if all you use your phone for is SMS & Voice it'll do an equally good job for 1/3rd of the price. It's better for some other people because they have the time and knowledge to customize so it works the way they want, not the way the manufacturer tells them they should want it to work. iPhone is awesome for most people, but you have to accept that it's not 'your phone', it's Apple's phone that you've bought the right to use for a couple of years - until the forced-obsolescence date, when it's time for you to upgrade. |
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-17-2017, 11:53 PM | #126 |
Brigadier General
3442
Rep 3,008
Posts Drives: 2020 M4 ZCP / 2023 X3 M40i Join Date: May 2005
Location: Northern VA
|
iOS 11 is supported on iPhone 5S which was released 4 years. Which 4 year Android device is still being supported by the manufacturer with the latest software?
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-18-2017, 12:13 AM | #127 | |
General
906
Rep 1,004
Posts Drives: 2008 BMW 135i (E88 N54 6AT) Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: Sunshine Coast QLD Australia
|
Quote:
The downside, of course, is I don't have any of the bling that's come with subsequent Android releases; and it can't run a whole bunch of new Android Apps which only support modern Android operating systems - but it can still run the last 'Jelly Bean' version of those apps. My iPhone 6 on the other hand has got progressively slower and more crashy since I upgraded to IOS 10, 10.1, 10.2 and 10.3, because the CPU & memory isn't anywhere near what it needs to be to run the latest operating system smoothly. The battery life is exactly what you'd expect of a 3 year old phone (ie. not long); and when IOS 11 gets pushed out it'll start asking me if I'd like to install IOS 11 now, or if I'd like to install IOS 11 tonight, or if I'd like to be reminded again in about 24 hours. And it'll do that until I agree to install IOS 11, which the hardware is totally incapable of running. Thus prompting me to do what I should've done last year, and go and buy a new iPhone. Edit: That's the difference between real obsolescence and forced obsolescence. Android has come a long way in the last 5 years, and if you use your phone to do more than making calls and sending & receiving SMS, you'll legitimately want to upgrade because software & hardware has really improved. Conversely, the iPhone 4S was a great phone, and if you have actively ignored all the updates since 2013, and gone down to your local shopping mall in the past 12 months and paid some dude $120 to change its battery, you'll find it's still a great phone that does 99% of what an iPhone 7 does. But it'll be reminding you _every day_ that you should upgrade to IOS 9.3.5 - and the second you do, it'll be slow and shit and crashy. Last edited by xQx; 09-18-2017 at 12:28 AM.. |
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-18-2017, 09:51 AM | #129 | |
Brigadier General
4064
Rep 4,099
Posts |
You write too much crap, I don't understand half of what your going on about, learn how to summarize your points, no need for essay's here, you aren't getting graded.
I currently use a Samsung S8+ and I can't understand you are on about, my experience is not based on a S2. Android is on drastically under-powered hardware? Man, you must be on the moon. Android devices largely out spec a comparable iPhone but still performs better. Quote:
__________________
|
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-18-2017, 10:12 AM | #130 |
Brigadier General
6926
Rep 3,270
Posts |
This obsession with 'customisation" is a BS argument, Android is still pretty inflexible and this is not most people's problem with apple.
The issue with apple is data management, lack of a file structure, syncing rather than saving and backing up, compatibility with other devices and systems (like simple casting), forced use of iTunes etc etc. |
09-18-2017, 12:48 PM | #131 | |
is probably out riding.
6059
Rep 2,292
Posts |
Quote:
I have a work around to get some of my DSLR pics on my phone and use Photosync or air drop to get photos and videos off of it. Can't stand syncing to iTunes.
__________________
"There is no greater tyranny than that which is perpetrated under the shield of the law and in the name of justice. -Charles de Secondat"
|
|
Appreciate
0
|
09-18-2017, 12:55 PM | #132 | |
First Lieutenant
117
Rep 306
Posts Drives: MY17 LBB M2 Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: Pasadena
|
Quote:
*I am scared that the next update will make it slower, though. That's what happened to my 3, so I'm not entirely dismissing your point. |
|
Appreciate
0
|
Post Reply |
Bookmarks |
|
|