http://www.techhive.com/article/2030042/why-i-switched-from-iphone-to-android.html
Very interesing read, given some of the comments on issues that Android has in this very forum.
Before anyone froths at the mouth, heed this:
Is that now injested? Time to read a few snippets:
Settings:
Keyboard:
Screens:
Size:
Now, Android is certainly not going to please everyone but it's always interesting to read how some die-hard iPhone users find using Android as an alternative.
Very interesing read, given some of the comments on issues that Android has in this very forum.
Before anyone froths at the mouth, heed this:
In this three-part epic, I'm going to walk you my decision. It's the story of why Android 4.1 and the S3 got me to switch. No way is it an argument about why anybody else should drop their iPhones and switch to a flagship Android phone.
Is that now injested? Time to read a few snippets:
Settings:
Gosh, it's lovely to access and adjust hardware settings directly from Android's status bar, instead of drilling down through device menus!
Keyboard:
As for speech-to-text (on the iPhone), I can truthfully say that I activate it every time I write anything longer than a sentence or two.
The microphone button is crowded right next to the spacebar, and iOS speech-to-text activates with a single careless tap instead of with a deliberate tap-and-hold. When I'm typing fast, I'm accidentally triggering speech-to-text All. The. Freaking. Time.
And if you don't like any of the keyboards that ship with Android, you can install one of your own. My add-on keyboard of choice is SwiftKey. It's doubleplus-brilliant and costs just four damn dollars.
I find that typing on an Android device is faster and much less annoying than typing on my iPhone. It's not even close.
Screens:
After just a couple of weeks with the Samsung Galaxy S III, my iPhone 4S screen stopped seeming "normal-sized." At first it became "small" and ultimately it became "too small."
Size:
The GS3 is indeed slightly larger than the iPhone 5. That'll be a huge, huge problem for you if you like to go from bar to bar trying to win sucker bets in which the guy with the largest phone has to buy the next round. Otherwise, when is this marginally-larger size an issue?
The iPhone is still too tall for me to easily operate with one hand, because an app's top row of controls is usually just out of reach.
Now, Android is certainly not going to please everyone but it's always interesting to read how some die-hard iPhone users find using Android as an alternative.