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Haha! Nah, the phone didn't hit it hard, but it was enough to scratch it.Still, I'd rather have a scratched iPhone 5 than a S3.
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Hahaha. Amen to that.
Haha! Nah, the phone didn't hit it hard, but it was enough to scratch it.Still, I'd rather have a scratched iPhone 5 than a S3.
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Haha! Nah, the phone didn't hit it hard, but it was enough to scratch it.Still, I'd rather have a scratched iPhone 5 than a S3.
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You guys will never give up on any opportunity to have a go at Samsung/Andorid. Fact is there are millions of people who bought the S3 and the iphone5, so just get over this childish baiting, however if you guys want to start round 2 then be my guest.Hahaha. Amen to that.![]()
You guys will never give up on any opportunity to have a go at Samsung/Andorid. Fact is there are millions of people who bought the S3 and the iphone5, so just get over this childish baiting, however if you guys want to start round 2 then be my guest.
You guys will never give up on any opportunity to have a go at Samsung/Andorid. Fact is there are millions of people who bought the S3 and the iphone5, so just get over this childish baiting, however if you guys want to start round 2 then be my guest.
Big news. Scott Forstall is being let go. I've said it since I bought a WP7 Nokia, iOS is old and need serious updating and it seems like Apple are onboard with the reality that Android and Windows Phone are leaping ahead with innovation with iOS is stagnant.
http://www.theverge.com/2012/10/29/3573226/scott-forstall-leaving-apple
Jony Ive will be head of ALL U/I of Apple going forward, which is amazing news. I've been hoping they would give him a leadership role for so long after Steve passed. With Jony holding the keys to all appearance of Apple going forward, I think we can expect some serious future products.
I think Forstall's work on iOS has been amazing but I think the reasons he's let go is because apparently he's impossible to work with, and has been butting heads with other Execs (Ive and Mansfield in particular) over creative and business stuff. Also, I think Tim Cook sensed stagnation coming from Forstall since Maps came out so "beta" when it wasn't supposed to be, and had to make a strong decision.
Regardless, Tim Cook put his stamp on the company yesterday, and I think Apple will be all the better for it. This is that "direct leadership" that people have been craving from Apple since Jobs left.
Ever since I heard Ive and Forstall were butting heads in a "him or me" kind of way, I've been paranoid that Ive would step down. Good to see that the opposite has happened. As I said before, Jony Ive has always been Apple's "secret weapon".
It's not only about Maps. iOS has been on the back foot about things like notifications, Twitter/Facebook integration and a camera button that works without needing to unlock the phone. Surely iOS was untouchable between 2007-2010 but now it's lacking such as the multitasking feature on the iPhone which is no good compared to the one on WP7 and Palm OS.
When there is iOS on the iPad which makes terrible use of screen realestate. Why isn't there expose-like multitaking where I can get an overview of all opened apps or a Dashboard in OS X where I can have widgets and see things like a twitter feed, weather and other nifty things without having to open an app for absolutely everything. Not to mentioned the updated music player on the iPad which is a huge step backward from the previous design.
Maps was just Scott falling on his own sword. The writings have been on the wall for quite some time. I'm not sure whether Jonathan Ive is the right replacement since his expertise is more on industrial design and program architecture and UI. Hopefully he will hire someone whom he can balance out with and really give iOS the modern improvements it needs.
Me? I think iOS looks and feels great. I really don't see or notice any of these "drawbacks" that naysers have toward it, and I certainly don't think Windows Phone is the answer, nor do I like Android's UI in comparison. I think that Forstall's approach was that if it's "not necessary, we won't put it on there", for better or worse. I also am a fan of skeuomorphism as it always provided a warmth to Apple devices, but it seems lots of people are ready for a "revolution past it", and Ive is the man for that. In a perfect world I want the original "Steve team" intact, but if Forstall is standing in the way for ultimate harmony, then Apple has to move forward.
I wouldn't cal them naysayers. Its really hard to see the short comings of iOS until you have tried a different platform for a few weeks. Bare in mind that that I have owned an iPod Touch in the past, into my second iPad and recently bought a Macbook Retina. So I am far from an Apple hater and neither am I an Apple fanboy, I'm just very open and rational about what I buy.
No OS is currently perfect. iOS is dated and stagnant, Android is streamlining and WP7 is growing up.The race between the three will ramp up aggressively the coming months, especially now that Google have launched a Nexus 4 for a mere $300 off contract which is absolutely incredible.
I am glad they offloaded John Browett because when I first heard of his appointment I couldn't understand why they wanted him. Thankful it seems like his ideas have been heard and strongly dislike especially in the area of staff pay, working hours and so forth.
If you have an old Android, you're pretty much stuck with it unless you up and get a new phone, while with iOS, you can DL the newest versions instantly and be not feel shortchanged.
Spot on. Planned obsolescence?This is EXACTLY how I felt with my android phones. On a side note, my mom's 4 still looks and feels good... at least not that "old" by any means.
I wouldn't accuse you of being an Apple hater, because I know you're not, but I don't get how iOS can be "dated". I mean, it looks like the same format that it did when it came out, but isn't the ultimate idea of a UI to be easy, simple and instantly recognizable? What I like about iOS is how everything you need is right on the home page/s. Also, iOS is one system, it's not "fragmented" like Android, therefore your phone isn't at risk of becoming bested or irrelevant by one of the gazillions of Androids that flood the market seemingly every week. If you have an old Android, you're pretty much stuck with it unless you up and get a new phone, while with iOS, you can DL the newest versions instantly and be not feel shortchanged. I haven't lived with a Windows Phone, but from my quick playing with it, it just seems comparatively messy and jumbled, clunky, however I have a HUGE distaste for Windows products, some of the most non-intuitive I've ever used, so maybe the first "essence" of it just puts me off.
iOS is as fragmented as Android. There is no Siri on the iPad 2 and neither does the iPad one support certain features. Fragmentation is impossible to avoid over time.
. iOS is essentially a "safer" experience, just like Mac OS is to Windows (don't get me started on Windows viruses and all the Norton crap you have to download to try and protect your computer when Mac's don't need anything of the sort.... just use and abuse it happily).
K-A going Android and BMW. What the hell is happening?
Nah, the S3 is a great phone, by all means. But believe me, when you get the 5 you'll especially notice the build quality (like you said, Rolex vs Fischer). But the S3's screen is VERY smooth, one of the things I really like about the phone.
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