Just curious.
I've changed things around constantly in a quest for perfection and a little bit of boredom. Right now my setup (of what I use most of anyway, ignoring my desktop) is:
MacBook Air running OS X - browser is Safari, because Chrome is terrible on MacBooks (has the CPU fan going a lot, drains the battery) but I use Google's services. Gmail for mail, Google Calendars and Contacts rather than iCloud, replaced Notes with Google Keep, replaced Photos with Google Photos. I have the Google apps running via Safari as applications by using an app called "Fluid" which lets you create standalone applications from websites.
iPad Mini 2 for all my iOS needs (I do also have a second hand iPhone 5S for dabbling with)
Google/Huawei Nexus 6P as my mobile phone daily driver. Naturally, this doesn't have the same dissonance as my MacBook - it's a Google device, a Google OS and runs Google applications and services 100%. I love everything Google does. Its cloud services seem so much quicker and more reliable than iCloud, the Music service is free and fully cloud-hosted without any of the antiquated iTunes nonsense and the subscription option serves to enhance rather than to confuse you. Because I've read their Privacy Policy and understand how they do things, I haven't fallen for the "Google sells all ur dataz!" FUD and find their ability to deduce so much about me fascinating (if very important to keep secure - all of my computer and smartphone accounts are thoroughly under lock and key). Location history is both scary and awesome. I ran my iPhone 5S for a couple of days with the Google app and allowed it to log my history and was disappointed that it didn't keep track of my lunchtime walk. It only knew (from wifi) that I'd been to work.
This works pretty well for me. A big temptation for an iPhone would be when owning a Mac, you have all the continuity stuff. When I had an iPhone 6, I found that I very very very rarely used the app continuity. The remote SMS was extremely useful, but MightyText does the same thing on Android AND lets you view and dismiss notifications too which is even better! I want to love iPhones and admire the way they tightly guard your battery life, but have found that "just not obsessing about having the thinnest phone ever, and having a decent battery instead" gives better results, even with things like MightyText running. (iOS only allows notification access via Bluetooth LE to save that weedy battery).
Browser syncing would be better if Chrome was any good on Macs I subscribe to Xmarks right now and that solves bookmark and open tab syncing (the latter needed a tweak to work in the latest Safari). But the open tabs only get pushed like every 15 minutes or so which is quite annoying.
Overall the combination works out pretty well for me. I'm just curious how many have this level of crossover between two extremely bitter rivals. The biggest risk is that they'll fall out enough to ban each other in some way...
I've changed things around constantly in a quest for perfection and a little bit of boredom. Right now my setup (of what I use most of anyway, ignoring my desktop) is:
MacBook Air running OS X - browser is Safari, because Chrome is terrible on MacBooks (has the CPU fan going a lot, drains the battery) but I use Google's services. Gmail for mail, Google Calendars and Contacts rather than iCloud, replaced Notes with Google Keep, replaced Photos with Google Photos. I have the Google apps running via Safari as applications by using an app called "Fluid" which lets you create standalone applications from websites.
iPad Mini 2 for all my iOS needs (I do also have a second hand iPhone 5S for dabbling with)
Google/Huawei Nexus 6P as my mobile phone daily driver. Naturally, this doesn't have the same dissonance as my MacBook - it's a Google device, a Google OS and runs Google applications and services 100%. I love everything Google does. Its cloud services seem so much quicker and more reliable than iCloud, the Music service is free and fully cloud-hosted without any of the antiquated iTunes nonsense and the subscription option serves to enhance rather than to confuse you. Because I've read their Privacy Policy and understand how they do things, I haven't fallen for the "Google sells all ur dataz!" FUD and find their ability to deduce so much about me fascinating (if very important to keep secure - all of my computer and smartphone accounts are thoroughly under lock and key). Location history is both scary and awesome. I ran my iPhone 5S for a couple of days with the Google app and allowed it to log my history and was disappointed that it didn't keep track of my lunchtime walk. It only knew (from wifi) that I'd been to work.
This works pretty well for me. A big temptation for an iPhone would be when owning a Mac, you have all the continuity stuff. When I had an iPhone 6, I found that I very very very rarely used the app continuity. The remote SMS was extremely useful, but MightyText does the same thing on Android AND lets you view and dismiss notifications too which is even better! I want to love iPhones and admire the way they tightly guard your battery life, but have found that "just not obsessing about having the thinnest phone ever, and having a decent battery instead" gives better results, even with things like MightyText running. (iOS only allows notification access via Bluetooth LE to save that weedy battery).
Browser syncing would be better if Chrome was any good on Macs I subscribe to Xmarks right now and that solves bookmark and open tab syncing (the latter needed a tweak to work in the latest Safari). But the open tabs only get pushed like every 15 minutes or so which is quite annoying.
Overall the combination works out pretty well for me. I'm just curious how many have this level of crossover between two extremely bitter rivals. The biggest risk is that they'll fall out enough to ban each other in some way...