Surface area and size are not the same thing.
Of course not, one is much more useful to judge on how much a bigger a device is versus another (Surface area)
Surface area and size are not the same thing.
Does it say "Size and Weight" or does it say "Surface Area and Weight"?
I'm to dumb to read what it says, so please post back and tell me.
Surface area and size are not the same thing.
That's cool, but not everyone wants to carry a giant phone in their pocket.
Of course not, one is much more useful to judge on how much a bigger a device is versus another (Surface area)
No one compares smartphones using surface area.
I was thinking about giving up my iPhone 5 for a Galaxy Note 2 on Verizon. If there was a jailbreak for the iPhone 5 then I wouldn't bother leaving Apple but I really can't stand the closed system. I don't mind that iOS is stale at stock but at least give me the chance to unlock my $850 device to its true potential. I have an iPad 3 on iOS 5.1.1 and a MacBook Pro. Honestly, the only three things that I will truly miss are iMessage, iTunes Match, and the smoothness of Safari.
No comment, absolutly no comment.
I miss two things on my Galaxy Note 2 from my iphone 4. Exchange support and ibooks. I use touchdown on my GN2 and imho, its just not close to ios built in Exchange support. And I have really come to enjoy reading books on the iphone 4.
I am right there with you. I was 100% iPhone till the disappointment that was the iPhone 5 woke me up.Got the note 2. God it is sweet. So fast. So big. S pen works great and will allow me to save a few trees by jotting notes.
Android has finally come of age this generation. It dies not feel as polished as ios but it is capable of so much more.
As someone who waited in line for day one of the first iphone it pains me to say it but I will not be returning to iphone anytime soon.
The cutting edge is no longer a appke product
What are you guys finding that so amazing over the iPhone??? I have a Nexus and I'm not seeing anything that it will do that the iPhone can't. ?? What am I missing?? And yes I agree with the poster above about Touchdown, it's an absolute let down that a OS this big cant deal with exchange in a decent way.
The Note 2 / Galaxy S3 takes really great closeup shots which is good for food photos! iPhone 5 on the other hand is better for landscape and low light shots but both cameras are pretty darn close in terms of overall quality. One of the things that I do miss is being able to use the volume button to take pictures and the shape of the iPhone 5 is perfect to use as an actual camera.
Bruh, you can not only take pictures using the volume rocker, but you can even take pictures using your VOICE!!! Look through the settings within the camera app. Glad you enjoy the Note 2. Make sure you install Adobe flash on your phone which will then be enabled in the stock browser.
- A camera that has features more in line with 2013 than 2003.
- A screen that wows me like the iPhone did (back in 2007).
- A pop-up browser so I am not yanked into Safari for everything.
- Toggles so I don't have to endure the danged Settings app for every little thing.
- Wave my hand over the device to see notifications. Amazing.
- A screen that is not the size of a postage stamp.
- Being able to set Chrome as my default browser.
- Etc., etc.
Michael
....
Huh? One of things the iphone is getting beat up most about is the small size of its screen. Many people are not wowed by the iPhone 5's screen. So, yea, the screen is an issue. Doesn't really matter how bright it is: few care about that vs. size. As for me, I prefer AMOLED so the iPhone doesn't really wow me. Now out of LCD displays, I will say it is very well done, albeit too small. I also know they can make it bigger and still make it bright: look at the iPad mini.1-My 5's screen is a wow factor but I'm use to great screen on my phones. Haven't played with a note to make an informed opinion on it but this isn't anything that Android has over the iPhone.
The reader function is needed for Safari on the iPhone for two reasons: One, the screen is so narrow that trying to read web pages in portrait is a chore and, two, that is further exacerbated by the fact that you can't increase text size.2-I use Safari, it's a great browser.(I use a Mac and aiPad also) The Reader function is great and something I wish Android had. The Android browsers offer nothing over Safari that I can see.
Spoken like someone who doesn't understand them. Also, what do you think toggles are?3-I will agree on this one, the toggles are a nice feature. I'd prefer if iOS implements them that thy be in the NC. I don't use Widgets, they're redundant waste of space,time and battery.
Waving my hand to see notifications is amazing, not a gimmick. My phone is on the kitchen counter while I am getting coffee and breakfast in the morning. If my hands are wet I just wave one over the phone and do not need to touch it.4-That's device specific I guess but I keep my phone in my pocket and on my console. When something happens I'm notified. If I'm outside doing whatever and I'm away from my phone for a few hours I look at my phone for what's been missed. The waving thing seems gimmicky to me, much the way FaceUnlock is. Cool no doubt, but once the novelty wears off I'd doubt I'd use it.
"Can't afford." Really? What kind of argument is that. As if the iPad mini is going to fit in my front pocket. Jeez.5- The screen size hype. I really wanted to see if a bigger screen was useful and if Android is a far as a lot say they are. So far I much prefer the size of the iPhone creek for my phone. To call it a postage stamp is funny, next to my iPad mini it does look small but it serves its purpose well. I guess if you can't afford two devices the solution may be a phablet or whatever they're called. For me the note is way to big to even try to be phone for daily use. 4.5 is stretching it. Again, I have a mini so screen size isn't that big to me but I can see where it would benefit others.
You, maybe. Meanwhile you are advocating being locked into a single solution whereas I am asking for choice. See the difference? If you like Safari I say more power to you--use it. When I say I prefer Chrome you just bring up Safari again. Ugh.6-Again, something that I don't have a issue with. Safari is a great browser and offers 95% of the features that the others offer so I haven't found a need to switch.
I'm sorry but this I just cannot take seriously. Touchdown has a 4.3 star rating out of over 12,000 ratings. "Crap" would never be that high.I will say this, Mail, specifically Exchange support is absolutely dreadful on Android. If you can recommend a decent app(not touchdown,it's crap) would be great.
Huh? One of things the iphone is getting beat up most about is the small size of its screen. Many people are not wowed by the iPhone 5's screen. So, yea, the screen is an issue. Doesn't really matter how bright it is: few care about that vs. size. As for me, I prefer AMOLED so the iPhone doesn't really wow me. Now out of LCD displays, I will say it is very well done, albeit too small. I also know they can make it bigger and still make it bright: look at the iPad mini.
The reader function is needed for Safari on the iPhone for two reasons: One, the screen is so narrow that trying to read web pages in portrait is a chore and, two, that is further exacerbated by the fact that you can't increase text size.
As for what Chrome has over Safari I can think of several right off the top of my head: no (ridiculous in 2013) 8-tab limitation, ability to increase text size without zooming the whole page, and the ability to view the page as you would on a desktop browser (for sites that do not give you that option). And you get those benefits in Chrome whether you are on Android or iOS.
So while you might like Safari, I have preferred Chrome on iOS over Safari since before I bought an Android phone. Now that I have an Android phone it lets me keep tabs in sync between my iPad (albeit crippled), Note 2, macs, and PC. Apple doesn't give me that opportunity with Safari since they don't make Safari for Android.
I understand them fine and it depends on where they are located as to what you would call them. If there on the home screen then yes, it's a widget, if its in the NC then it's just a toggle. Android has both so the option is out there. That's the customization part but pulling down the shade and hitting the same switch from anywhere is much easier than going back to home,then the page the widgets on, then hitting what you want. I do wish iOS had them and as I said, I think they need to be in the NC. Same as Android. Widgets are redundant unless like I said it a social one. I rarely use either so they provide zero functionality to me. Weather, should be in NC. I don't need to see it every time I turn the screen on. If there's an alert, the app notifies me in the NC on both OS's. Email, all new emails are in the NC, no need to have a widget. If I need to do something in email I open the app. The only function I can see a email widget providing is a quick compose but them that's more of a shortcut than a widget. Clocks, redundant, Widgets for apps,redundant. Some use them and that's great but I wouldn't call it an advantage having them vs not.Spoken like someone who doesn't understand them. Also, what do you think toggles are?
Great example, I haven't thought of that and that is a nice feature but its limited to certain models.(if there's a way to get that on my Nexus please let me know) As far as on my iPhone, if I'm doing the same the screen comes on and gives me a preview so I can glance at it then. Once I sit down to breakfast I can pick up my phone and go through the ones that need my attention. From your example I can see where I would come in handy. As far as LED light, I'm not calling that a gimmick but its something that I don't miss or need. My phone is on my side like it has been since I had a star-tac so I know when something's come in. When its not on my side, my phone is the least important thing to me. We. I get back to it, I check my phone. I have my iPhone set to notify me 3 times for texts so if I am at my desk and walk into another room when I come back I don't miss it because I haven't checked my phone. If its a email, it's shows on my desktop. The only place I wish I could change the setting for repeated alerts is phone calls. This is where the LED light would come in for me but its not a huge issue and I can see where it comes in for others.Waving my hand to see notifications is amazing, not a gimmick. My phone is on the kitchen counter while I am getting coffee and breakfast in the morning. If my hands are wet I just wave one over the phone and do not need to touch it.
I might use it less in the future but only because I will have better configured my LED notification colors. Right now it is blue for texts and whatsapp. Once I change that I won't have to do anything to know what kind of notification I have waiting without doing anything but glance at the phone.
You can't call a notification LED a gimmick as it was useful before the iPhone ever came out. It was one of the things I missed when I got my first iPhone in 2007. I had it on my prior phone, albeit much more simplistic than what I have now.
The mini does fit in the front pockets of all my suits and slacks. It goes with me everywhere. If I go into a restaurant I generally leave it in the car unless I'm alone then I take it. Not a hassle at all. If I'm in jeans it's still with me although it doesn't fit in my front pockets I'm generally doing something where the last thing I want to be doing is staring at a screen. I do that enough throughout the week. Plus, my phone will handle anything I need to do regardless of screen size. So yes, if you can't afford two devices it a meet in the middle solution to have a 4.5-5" phone. I can see that but if you had a Nexus7 or iPad/mini I don't think screen size of your phone is that huge of a deal. It does what you need and if you want a larger screen you have another device that's much better than a 5" phone. Regardless of Android or iOS."Can't afford." Really? What kind of argument is that. As if the iPad mini is going to fit in my front pocket. Jeez.
I do see the difference, I can see where having a choice of default browser would benefit you. Links in email,web pages and so on. I'm not advocating being locked into a single solution I was merely stating why/what I use. My original question was what are the advantages that I'm missing/not seeing in Android.You, maybe. Meanwhile you are advocating being locked into a single solution whereas I am asking for choice. See the difference? If you like Safari I say more power to you--use it. When I say I prefer Chrome you just bring up Safari again. Ugh.
I'm sorry but this I just cannot take seriously. Touchdown has a 4.3 star rating out of over 12,000 ratings. "Crap" would never be that high.
What are you needing from exchange on your note that it's not doing? I've found that i can use exchange on my note just as well as the desktop client or web edition. Everything is synced and folders work just as well.