The Apple Core

Jason D. O'Grady & David Morgenstern

5 ways the iPhone beats the Nexus One

By | March 26, 2010, 3:00am PDT

Summary: Despite my recent post about the Nexus One being a better phone than the iPhone, there are several things that the iPhone does better than Android.

http://planet-iphones.com/wp-content/filez/upload/3.0vsAndroid.png

Despite my recent post about the Nexus One being a better phone than the iPhone, there are several things that the iPhone does better than Android. Here’s my short list:

1) Copy and paste. Ever tried this on an Android phone? It’s horribly clunky and counter-intuitive while the iPhone’s copy and paste implementation is slick and well thought out. To make matters worse, you can’t copy from an email on the Nexus One. Case closed.

2) Touchscreen. The Nexus One is praised for its WVGA (480×800) AMOLED screen, but in reality text appears less sharp and crisp than it does on the iPhone. As it turns out, the N1 doesn’t have true WVGA resolution, the PenTile matrix pixel layout of the AMOLED screen in the Nexus One means that the total effective addressable spatial resolution of the display is actually more like 392 x 653 (sans signal processing). The N1 touchscreen also has less precision and sensitivity than the iPhone’s. Although anecdotal, the bottom half-inch of my N1 screen would frequently “go deaf” and not allow me to answer a phone call or retrieve voicemail.

3) Music app. The music app on Android in tolerable if you’ve never used the iPod app on the iPhone, but if you have, it’s a kludge. The interface is completely, wait for it, LAME. As I previously wrote one benefit of the Android Music app is that it gives you unrestricted access to the music library on the microSD card. The iPhone? Not so much. Although access to the music files on Android is a plus, the iPhone’s iPod app wins the day for its UI, store integration and support for podcasts. Note: I fully expect Music to get overhauled much like Gallery did, see my note at the end of this post.

4) Google Voice. Although Google Voice is probably one of the single best Android features, the SMS drives me nuts. It doesn’t thread SMS conversations properly like the iPhone’s Messages app. Messages threads all SMS/MMS from a contact into one screen, which is logical and convenient. However GV sometimes splits the threads randomly causing you to have to check multiple messages from the same person. It isn’t because of time or number of messages as far as I can tell. Although it sounds trivial, when using GV exclusively for SMS it’s a royal pain.

5) App Store. The Android Market doesn’t have the selection or quality of the App Store, although it is gaining ground fast. Most of the majors are there: Amazon, eBay, Facebook, but other more obscure or more vertical apps will probably arrive in the App Store first.

So there you have, life isn’t perfect in Android-ville. The iPhone definitely has its pluses, but at the end of the day the Nexus One is still a better smartphone.

What about you? Android or iPhone?

Note: Android’s original Gallery app was originally on this list because of its horrible UI, but that all changed with the new 3D Gallery app that came with Android 2.1. It has transparency, stacking, accelerometer support and more ways to share than ever. Gallery really belongs in my reasons Nexus One is better post.

Image: Planet iPhones

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Topics

Jason O'Grady is a journalist and author specializing in mobile technology. He has published six books on Apple and mobile gadgets and his PowerPage blog has been publishing for over 15 years.

Disclosure

Jason D. O'Grady

Jason D. O'Grady is the creator and editor of O'Grady's PowerPage, which has been publishing mobile technology news since 1995. He maintains an advertising relationship with the following legacy advertisers on the PowerPage:

  • Amazon Associates
  • Google Adsense
  • Tekserve
  • Advertising on the PowerPage is brokered by a third-party agency (BackBeat Media) and he recuses himself from these negotiations.

Biography

Jason D. O'Grady

Jason D. O'Grady developed an affinity for Apple computers after using the original Lisa, and this affinity turned into a bona-fide obsession when he got the original 128 KB Macintosh in 1984.

He started writing one of the first Web sites about Apple (O'Grady's PowerPage) in 1995 and is considered to be one of the fathers of blogging. He has been a frequent speaker at the Macworld Expo conference and a member of the conference faculty. He also co-founded the first dedicated PowerBook User Group (PPUG) in the United States.

After winning a major legal battle with Apple in 2006, he set the precedent that independent journalists are entitled to the same protections under the First Amendment as members of the mainstream media.

O'Grady is the author of The Nexus One Pocket Guide, The Droid Pocket Guide, The Google Phone Pocket Guide, and The Garmin nuvi Pocket Guide (Peachpit Press), the author of Corporations That Changed the World: Apple Inc. (Greenwood Press), and a contributor to The Mac Bible (Peachpit Press). In addition, he has contributed to numerous Mac publications over the years, including MacWEEK, Macworld, and MacPower (Japan).

When he's not writing about Apple for ZDNet at The Apple Core, he enjoys spending time with his family in New Jersey.

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RE: 5 ways the iPhone beats the Nexus One
Nexus Five 31st Mar 2010
5 ways? shocked WOW!! u couldn't come up with some more?

I like Nexus One, and you iPhone lovers can just stop talking **** about it? google wont remove it from the market because of posts like this or something. Other companys, like google, htc, nokia etc... can make phones, so what if other phones are better? they cant just shut down everything because of iPhone!
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regarding the App store
The Star King 26th Mar 2010
Is this app store specific to the Nexus 1 or is it a general Android app store? I've heard Android OS is getting very fragmented. Do you have to check carefully what version (etc) of Android an app is for? HAve you ever downloaded an app only to be told "you have the wrong version of libc++" or something like that?
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App Store answers
mrlinux 26th Mar 2010
1) This is just my observation, It seems the market app does some sort of filtering(maybe carrier related) where certain apps do not show up for different versions of Android.

2) As for issues with Apps I have had a couple that would not run, but I am also running a modified rom so I would attribute those issues 2 my modified phone.
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Nexus Display lies
vic.healey@... 26th Mar 2010
That has already come up. If your version of Android is insufficient for an application it is not supposed to even display it as an option in the app store much less download it and install it.

What astonishes me is the deceptive specifications of the Google Nexus one that were revealed today. I always wondered why the text was so blurry compared to the iPhone. Now I know it is just not my eyes but they lied about the true Nexus display resolution. Each pixel can not display all three basic colors and hues as on any normal phone. Duh?

It just proves people who buy hardware based on supposed specifications instead of what their eyes or ears tell them are idiots.
0 Votes
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Blurry text? It bothers me...
vkelman@... 26th Mar 2010
Yes, I also noticed that blurry text. And it
bothers me too. So far I only heard on all the
popular podcasts (Engadget, TWIG, etc.) how
beautiful is Nexus One's AMOLED screen.

I don't have iPhone, but I compared text on
Nexus One with the same text on ADP1 (HTC Dream
- smaller resolution) and Zii EGG.

Vladimir Kelman
http://webofandroids.blogspot.com/
https://wave.google.com/wave/#restored:wave:goog
lewave.com!w%252BmGAqdR7kA
0 Votes
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haha.. Android has been updated, fools!
i2fun@... 27th Mar 2010
Android now supports fully vectored display of not
only video & pictures, but the entire Desktop. It's
not only running the Same OpenGL ES 2.0 the iPhone
3GS sports, but it also comes with the full
complement of Khronos Group's fully featured API's.
That support GPU (OpenVG) accelerated FLASH 10.1,
the same as every other device (including Mac OS-X)
except the iPlatform. So even if iPhone/iPad had
FLASH it wouldn't be hardware accelerated! wink

With the complete system now running compositing
surface engine (animated desktop display, iphone
can't) w/ OpenVG, it's only a mater of time before
FULLY VECTORED FONTS arrive and then you'll know
how inferior iPhone's low res crap Screen really
is!

Sorry bubb.... but analyst agree that Android
Platform with over 200 devices on the market by
2012 will runaway from iPhone into 2nd. Behind.....
yes..., Nokia. So who's your daddy? lol yes Nokia
teamed up with Intel on MeeGo will kick both their
asses! grin Linux and Open Source will rule the
mobile World!

Note: Word is Intel not only has some incredible
chip power up their mobile sleeves, but the price
will be rock bottom. There will be an explosion of
not only Nokia but Intel devices by 2012 as Apple's
iPlatform fades into oblivion by 2015! wink
0 Votes
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Even new phones get old Android OS.
CathyCC 27th Mar 2010
Why are so many brand new phone, coming with a VERY old v1.6 Android OS????
0 Votes
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It Depends on Hardware Capabilities!
i2fun@... 27th Mar 2010
It actually depends on hardware capabilities of
the phone and whether the carrier & hardware
maker has been working on their own subsystem
(like HTC's SenseUI). That is all controlled by
manufacturer. Not Google!

HTC has probably the best and fastest R&D
department out there. That's why their phones
all have the newest version of Android. It
helps that they also have several Android
developers on lend from Google! grin

....so time to market of a device is greater on
some other carriers (Verizon has their own
stuff to incorporate into Android). That have
delayed time frames because of this.
0 Votes
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Blurry?
Spatha 26th Mar 2010
I don't doubt text is clearer on an iPhone, but my Nexus One shows text very clearly.

Regarding the Nexus One display itself, it wasn't only praised for its specs. Many reviewers commented on how it *Looked*, considering images, video and text. Please note, I'm NOT saying it's better than the iPhone.
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Contributr
Fragmentation
Jason D. O'Grady Updated - 26th Mar 2010
Fragmentation is absolutely an issue with the Android Market, some apps only work on some phones (mostly because of differences in screen resolution), some apps have different versions for Droid/N1/etc., and worse, some don't tell you at all that they don't work on the N1 (the newest Android handset) and just crash on launch.

There's also an issue with certain Android users not being able to access their protected (paid) apps after switching phones. See:

http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/Android+Market/thread?tid=310f30135cab14d9&hl=en

- Jason
0 Votes
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Not really
sovok_ 26th Mar 2010
Fragmentation is not really an issue.
It is possible and not too difficult to develop one application across all android phones.
The issue is more about legacy applications that have been developed based on the first versions of android as well as about unprofessional developers.
0 Votes
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old apps only
frankenstone 26th Mar 2010
Indeed. And more to the point, those are old apps which obviously haven't had an update in months. Because ever since Android 1.5/1.6, most apps work on every device. If the app was made for Android 1.1, and hasn't been updated since then, you probably don't want that app anyways!
0 Votes
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Sounds like an excuse to me
Pete "athynz" Athens 26th Mar 2010
or the Android fanbois say "it's a feature"...

ALL of my iPhone apps have worked for me through every single OS update. Imagine that.
0 Votes
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That's not quite right
dcdavy 26th Mar 2010
Specifically apps made for iPhone prior version 3.0 tend to be having problems in version 3.0. I paid for something that was scanning neighborhood wifi networks before 3.0. Guess what ... keeps crashing on 3.0 every time. There's no update for this particular app. So please don't say there's no issues of this kind on the iPhone.
0 Votes
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I have not had that issue
Pete "athynz" Athens 26th Mar 2010
Which app was it?
0 Votes
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Ask any dev and they will say the OS version "issue" that is hyped by the iPhone loving media is a crock. One dev mentioned that it is 15 minutes of extra work to ensure his apps run across different OS levels. NOT the doom and gloom the media keeps portraying.

The app store does a great job of filtering based on your phone type so if a particular dev did not develop his app for all OS types and yours is not included, you simply don't see it.

The switching phone thing may have some truth to it if you bought apps from devs that didn't include all OS types, however, I see that problem going away as apps and Android devs mature with the product.
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Re: Fragmentation
pwabbit@... 26th Mar 2010
I would think that programs exist that work on the current iPhones that don't work on the older iPhone/OS. There are programs that will work on Win Mobile 7 but wont work on the earlier OS's. Same with BlackBerry. I think the fragmentation label was just floated by some Android haters. However, the label validly applies to all technology (XP being sold along with Vista). Generally, the Android Market shows only the apps that apply to the operating system on the phone. I am sure it is not perfect system, but it is a decent concept.
0 Votes
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Not true
Pete "athynz" Athens 26th Mar 2010
I would think that programs exist that work on the current iPhones that don't work on the older iPhone/OS

There are a few apps that have not been updated since iPhone OS 2 first came out (at the same time as the App Store) and they will run on the current version of the OS (3.1.3). Not to say they will run on the next major revision (OS 4.0) but for now that is not an issue. There is an issue of app being updated that will only run on the current OS and one would then either have to update the OS or go without but the backwards compatibility is there.
0 Votes
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@Jason
Snooki_smoosh_smoosh 26th Mar 2010
then maybe, just maybe this should have been another plus for the iPhone category. The fact that there is zero fragmentation of apps in the iPhone platform. And also another plus is the fact that these apps will work on the upcoming iPad.

There is also the article earlier about the touch interface being superior on the iPhone vs the others.
0 Votes
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Android Market answer
frankenstone 26th Mar 2010
The NexusOne uses the standard Android Market.

The cries of fragmentation are only from iPhone fanbois. If an app doesn't work on your device, IT WONT SHOW UP AT ALL in the Market!

I'm sick of Apple fankids trying to spread falsehoods about Android because they're afraid of some competition.
0 Votes
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@frankenstone
Axsimulate 26th Mar 2010
You make it sound like filtering is a good thing. At least until you've bought a bunch of apps than upgraded your phone and found they don't run on your new one. Admit it, if this happened to you, you would be peeved.
0 Votes
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So Joe user hears about an cool App or Game,....
dave95. Updated - 26th Mar 2010
Loads the App Marketplace only to run away disappointed that his/her version of Android (or screen size) does not support it?



0 Votes
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Repeating this will not make it true
Pete "athynz" Athens 26th Mar 2010
The cries of fragmentation are only from iPhone fanbois.

Funny thing is I checked the link Jason provided and it looks like all of those people are using a MyTouch 3G which - if I'm not mistaken - is an Android based device, not an iPhone. iPhone users do not have issues with fragmentation BTW.

If an app doesn't work on your device, IT WONT SHOW UP AT ALL in the Market!

Doesn't seem to ring true looking at the posts on that forum... I'm just saying...

I'm sick of Apple fankids trying to spread falsehoods about Android because they're afraid of some competition.


Doesn't sound like competition to me.
0 Votes
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Like it or not: "Android will take over the Internet Porn market in
2011"

Prove me wrong, Will Google stop "porn Apps"

"Google has rules and standards for Android Market that prevent
application developers from incorporating adult content. But thanks to
Android?s open nature you can get pretty much anything you want on
your phone and now a service called MiKandi is helping you find all
the naughtiest things you can possibly think/dream/fantasize of in
one place ? MiKandi Market."
0 Votes
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App store filters just fine
MicroNix 26th Mar 2010
The app store actually does a good job of filtering based on your current version of the Android OS. Apps for higher OS versions don't show up.
0 Votes
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app store
slimweasel 26th Mar 2010
All Android devices access the same app store called the "Android Market." This means that no matter what Android phone you have you will be looking at the same app store.
The only difference is that there are 3-4 popular versions of the Android OS out there, being versions 1.5-2.1. Some apps are designed to run better on different versions of the OS and therefore are only visible in the market to phones who have a matching OS. If you do not have the correct OS version for a specific app you will not get an error message when you install it, it will simply never present itself to be downloaded.
Hope this helps some.
0 Votes
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Copy and past is fine an android, It is all about what you become use to. The Copy/Past in Iphone does look nicer

Both Screens look nice to me.

Don't like the music app? Install a different one, there are many on the market. Unlike the iPhone you can put any app on your phone.

I have never used an iPhone SMS, but i have never had an issue using GV for SMS. I think this again may be an issue that you just got used to something and like it that way now.

App store... Still trying to make this point eh?
Name one usefully app on the iPhone that does not have an equivalent on the android market.
0 Votes
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I can name one
rynning 26th Mar 2010
PlayerTracker - you can set up all players on a soccer, hockey, etc. team and track how long they are on the field/ice during a game.

It's useful to me. You didn't say it had to be useful(ly) to 90%+ of everyone.
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Useful apps not on Android
Synthmeister 26th Mar 2010
How about the POS system Apple has set up for their Apple retail chain
using iPod touches? Does Android have anything like that already
deployed in a major retail environment?

http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/09/12/02/retailers_want_in_on_a
pples_ipod_touch_point_of_sale_system.html

How about a major medical deployment like this:
http://www.apple.com/iphone/business/profiles/mt-sinai/
Does Android have anything similar?
0 Votes
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"POS" - HA!
rynning 26th Mar 2010
I thought you meant something other than point-of-sale until I realized you weren't bashing Apple...
0 Votes
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Medical app
tikigawd 26th Mar 2010
The hospital could easily develop that for Android if they saw the need for it.
Furthermore, since that app is developed by and for the hospital it's hardly something that truly differentiates the iPhone in the broad market. No consumer is going out to buy an iPhone just because Mount Sinai has an app for its medical records. The hospital probably provides the iPhones to its staff.
0 Votes
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iphone security risk
free1369 26th Mar 2010
That is scary information.Most businesses ban or limit the use of
iPhones bwcause they are so easy to hack into. IPhone and Safari fell at
the pwn2own contest within seconds. I hope the hospital isn't allowing
sensitive info to be stored on these phones. This is the 3rd year in a
row that Apple had failed miserably. Strange that such an app would be
on that phone !
0 Votes
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@free1369
Axsimulate 29th Mar 2010
Strange, Windows and IE/Firefox fell three years in a row as well. Only not first because of luck of the draw.
0 Votes
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Re: useful apps
jntowers 26th Mar 2010
* = I know they're in development

- mint.com*
- logmein ignition*
- numerous games my kids play... and if you
have kids, you know that that counts as
"useful"! happy
- mBox Mail (this one is subjective as I have
an active Hotmail account I still use quite a
bit)


I've extensively tried out the 3Gs (which is
what I finally settled on recently, but I get
good AT&T coverage here, too, which helps) and
the Droid and Droid ERIS. Even the apps that
are on both seem to just run better or be more
fully featured on iPhone OS 3.*
0 Votes
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This very much sounds like a case of "it's not EXACTLY how it was on the iphone, so i don't like it". I definitely agree.

I mean, this dude's comparing apples to oranges in some cases. The Google Voice App (ie NOT the standard Android SMS client), to the standard iPhone SMS client. Why the odd comparison?
0 Votes
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Re: same as iPhone
jntowers 26th Mar 2010
I literally spent days with a Droid, Droid ERIS
and a 3Gs, combing over both at the same time,
comparing a lot of my favorite apps that are on
both markets. The fact of the matter is, a lot
of apps are still a more streamlined experience
on the iPhone - likely b/c they've been
developing for that platform longer than for
Android. 6 months from now this likely won't be
the case with the way Android has really heated
up since the Droid was released.

Just because somebody favors the iPhone in
certain areas doesn't mean they're an Apple
fanboi - your logic is self-defeating!
0 Votes
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All of the popular major apps run and function the same on both platforms. The only benefit on the iPhone is that the UI is a little smoother.

Things like USA Today, Weather bug, etc. function just fine. In fact, many of these OUTPERFORM THE IPHONE (holy crap, here comes the lightning strike) because unlike the iPhone, Android truly multitasks. The notification bar shows the current temp, widgets show our current weather conditions of the current location you are in. News is constantly updated in widgets. All of these do NOT require you to open an app, they are on your main screens! So when someone says there is more functionality on the iPhone with these apps, it is pure FUD! For instance, I can have one screen (we aren't limited to a 4x5 screen of icons) with a weather widget showing current conditions, a news widget showing current top stories, another news widget specifically for tech, and another widget for controlling music. All function without opening an app one at a time. Can the iPhone do THAT? No, but someday it might grow up and actually re-invent itself instead of the same stale icon based screens it is had since day one. Android is already more technically advanced than the iPhone OS and that's no lie.
0 Votes
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Re: All major apps
jntowers 26th Mar 2010
No lightning strikes from here... You couldn't
be more right. The multi-tasking is a definite
HUGE plus. Hopefully iPhone OS 4.0 adds this,
as *rumors* indicate it's a possibility. I've
jailbroken before, which helps a lot, but I
don't like having to do that. I wouldn't say
Android is more technically advanced, however.
Apple, in its infinite wisdom (please hear
sarcasm), has just limited their OS for
"security" and whatever other purposes that they
deemed appropriate. Have you ever used a
jailbroken 3Gs? Yes, I get the principle
problem with having to do that in order to get
full functionality and the advantage of the
openness of Android.

One other factor that nobody on these tech blog
discussions ever seems to bring up (maybe
because none of us fall into this category): my
62 year old dad and my wife hate and would never
use Android, but they love the iPhone interface.
And they're both new to both, so it's not like
they're used to one or the other. Most people
don't care about a single finger click to check
the weather or news when they know that, no
matter what, all they have to do is a single
finger click - no customization or tweaking
necessary. If there is one thing Apple has
mastered over others, it's their ability to
appeal to the "don't care how it works as long
as I can use it seamlessly and it works" crowd.
And, honestly, that makes up a much higher
percentage of the population than those of us
that read/participate in these articles. People
go off on Apple for their controlling practices
with the iPhone, but the honest truth is that
most of the population doesn't care about open
source, app dev freedom, and all of that.
0 Votes
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Agreed.....
dave95. Updated - 26th Mar 2010
It's like the Mac vs PC argument all over again, but this time with smart phones. Apple creates a device that's targeted to a certain core users who favors seamlessness and ease of use over the 'kitchen sink approach'. They usually set the standard when it comes to usability for the average consumer (their core target). If it does not work seamlessly, Apple probably wont add that feature in, as we've seen with copy and paste.

Techie fanboi comes along and argues how much his PC/Smart Phone is "better" because it does everything and then some that a techie fanboi ever wanted in life. Does not matter if the majority of the iPhones users Apple is targeting care less about such features, it is deemed inferior by techie so there! (subjectivity? what subjectivity?)
0 Votes
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Uhuh And Then.....
MLHACK 26th Mar 2010
Stuck up Apple FanBoy asks techie fanboy for assistance when his pretty apple breaks. Apple is like having a trophy wife/girlfriend looks are wonderful but dumb as a stump.
0 Votes
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@ MLHACK - Case in point !!
dave95. Updated - 26th Mar 2010
So I suppose you feel the iPhone is really a Dumb 'Blond' Phone? LOL


0 Votes
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Deja Vu
hiraghm@... 26th Mar 2010
I feel as if I'm back in the early '90s listening to Apple fanbois and Windows fanbois prattle on about how their PoS OSes are so uber.

Meanwhile, I'd had all they were bragging about, better, in the mid '80s on my Amiga.

In about '95, suddenly, Windows and Mac had discovered non-preemptive multitasking.. and.. and color... and graphics... y'know, the core of all those artsy-fartsy Mac apps and power-hungry Windows games that people play today.

Saw a commercial the other day for a "new" controller for the PS3 that does what Mandala did back in the late '80s on the Amiga.

So, before you sneer to hard at the techies, be prepared for their Android-lust to become ho-hum standards on the IPhoney and Windows Morbid in a few years.
0 Votes
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@MicroNix
Axsimulate 26th Mar 2010
"because unlike the iPhone, Android truly multitasks."

With the iPhone, can someone surf the Internet and talk at the same time?
0 Votes
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Surf and talk, whoopie!
MicroNix 26th Mar 2010
I would use true multitasking far more than someone not paying attention to their phone call and surfing the web. What's more, I don't spend enough time in a phone call to ever make that useful. And wait a minute, Android phones on AT&T's network can do the same thing. This is *not* by any means an Apple "feature". It is the network.

But hey, if surfing the net and losing 3G while losing your phone call is what you call multitasking, then it was designed just for you! As someone who had AT&T, I know well what a crappy network the iPhone is on. If talking and surfing at the same time makes up for dropped calls for you, good for you!
0 Votes
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@MicroNix
Axsimulate Updated - 29th Mar 2010
If it can do at bare minimum 2 things at the same time, like it or not that is multitasking.

How about giving us the link to the definition of "True" multitasking? Bet you can't.

The term "True" multitasking is a made up word by zealots that hate the iPhone or just like in the 90's, only after Win95 came out, that hate the Mac.
There is Preemptive and Cooperative multitasking in the computer world. Both are multitasking, not "True" or it's opposite "False".
It either multitasks or it don't, there is no in between or any other type made up because you happen to dislike the product.
A better term that should be used to describe the iPhone should be "restricted multitasking" or "limited multitasking".
That is not necessarily a bad thing. Android has a problem with it slowing to a crawl. just do some google searches about slow Android phones and look at the responses. There is even apps for it to manually quit apps to get your speed back such as Advanced Task Manager. To an uber geek, this is a good thing, to the lay person it's a major problem. I've read where people are returning their Android phones because they are too slow and don't understand why or how to fix the problem.

http://www.google.com/search?q=+slow+android+phone&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a
Yes you can, you have a green bar on top of your safari window to return
to the controls of the call, you should try the iPhone sometime.....
0 Votes
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@?Dilemma
Axsimulate 29th Mar 2010
I have, my wife has one, and that is my point. These iPhone haters all spout off that it can't multitask or it doesn't do "True" multitasking. Well if it can do at bare minimum 2 things at the same time, like it or not that is multitasking. There is no such thing as "True" multitasking. It either multitasks or it don't, there is no in between.
0 Votes
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Pre Med / Post Med Apps
WarhavenSC 26th Mar 2010
There are a lot of pre med training apps (very useful) and post med apps (also, very useful) that are iPhone only.
0 Votes
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med apps
free1369 26th Mar 2010
Well this clears up my security fears in my other post ( except that any
hacker can still steal all your contacts and personal info from your
iPhone ) ! BTW, I understand that you Apple ladies are in love with your
apps, but ( maybe because your unable to comprehend anything that's
not associated with a "dumbphone ) there is no such thing as an
iPhone developer or iPhone exclusive app. App developers create apps
that will make them money. Apps that are on iPhone are already in the
Android market or will be soon. 75% of "iPhone app devs" stated that
they will be creatong the same apps for Android. However, less than
40% of Android devs said they would work on iPhone apps. The
Android offers developers an open, developer system and their apps
will look better because so many Androids have incredible screen res
and faster processors. The developers get a larger percentage from
Google, too. So there is no such thing as iPhone only. I only hope
Android can keep all of the iPhones garbage apps out of the market.
0 Votes
+ -
Not sure you got your math right, I say you get it 100% wrong.

Lets make it very clear, you're really not to bright when it comes to
iPhone Apps, The developers that got kicked off Apple, just picked up
and move over to Android. Apple keeps the very best. If you're a top
of the line programer for the iPhone, your next meal ticket will be the
iPad. Why wast your time on junk programing for Google, when Apple
has a much bigger market. Good programs make tons of money with
Apple's products. Google on the other hand will push advertising
apps on the Android system, like it or not, the only thing left for
Android will be the iPhones garbage apps and lots a porn!

Good luck with that...
0 Votes
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RE: 5 ways the iPhone beats the Nexus One
frankenstone 26th Mar 2010
The NexusOne uses the standard Android Market.

The cries of fragmentation are only from iPhone fanbois. If an app doesn't work on your device, IT WONT SHOW UP AT ALL in the Market!

I'm sick of Apple fankids trying to spread falsehoods about Android because they're afraid of some competition.
0 Votes
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5 ways? shocked WOW!! u couldn't come up with some more?

I like Nexus One, and you iPhone lovers can just stop talking **** about it? google wont remove it from the market because of posts like this or something. Other companys, like google, htc, nokia etc... can make phones, so what if other phones are better? they cant just shut down everything because of iPhone!

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