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heycal

macrumors 6502a
Jul 25, 2013
826
22
I always found Siri to be superior to Google Now for the functions you would want on a phone, it's been a while since I've used siri though.

I can't really speak on this. I did watch a youtube demonstration of Siri on the iphone 6 on youtube, and it was laughably bad compared to Ok google.

Why not? With 14 days to figure it out, it's no big deal to "throw your lot in", and have a charge of heart if necessary.

That was certainly the case with the iPhone 6.

I just find it odd that someone who had a horrible experience with the S4 would choose the S5 over all the other phone choices out there.

What happened with the iphone 6? Did you try it and not like it? Why not?
 

spinedoc77

macrumors G4
Jun 11, 2009
11,488
5,413
I can't really speak on this. I did watch a youtube demonstration of Siri on the iphone 6 on youtube, and it was laughably bad compared to Ok google.



I just find it odd that someone who had a horrible experience with the S4 would choose the S5 over all the other phone choices out there.

What happened with the iphone 6? Did you try it and not like it? Why not?

Siri is actually pretty awesome compared to google now. I'm an android user, I have a Note 4, but I still would highly prefer Siri. Mainly in phone type functions it's much better IMO, the kind of stuff you want your phone to be a personal assistant in. Google now is much too tied to an internet search IMO.
 

heycal

macrumors 6502a
Jul 25, 2013
826
22
Siri is actually pretty awesome compared to google now. I'm an android user, I have a Note 4, but I still would highly prefer Siri. Mainly in phone type functions it's much better IMO, the kind of stuff you want your phone to be a personal assistant in. Google now is much too tied to an internet search IMO.

What are examples in ways you think it's better? Ok google is indeed excellent for searches, but it also works fine for sending texts or making calls. What is Siri doing differently or better?
 

MasterRyu2011

macrumors 65816
Aug 22, 2014
1,064
359
Just to be thorough. Don't forget about the Apple Watch. If you want to wear one, you're going to have to stick with iOS. Of course, Android Wear watches are pretty awesome in their own right.

----------

What are examples in ways you think it's better? Ok google is indeed excellent for searches, but it also works fine for sending texts or making calls. What is Siri doing differently or better?

I think Google Now is way superior to Siri. But the thing with an iPhone is that you have access to both Siri and Google Now. The inverse is not true
 

heycal

macrumors 6502a
Jul 25, 2013
826
22
I think Google Now is way superior to Siri. But the thing with an iPhone is that you have access to both Siri and Google Now. The inverse is not true

Does google now work as good on iphone?

I'm thisclose to returning my new Galaxy s4 after a few days. Awesome when it works, but so far this the folllowing has happened:

1. The phone didn't honor the one minute screen time-out I'd set but stayed on indefinitely. A reboot fixed it, for now.

2. I've gotten "kindle closed unexpectantly" messages at at least three times so far.

3. Had a couple of times the light flow LED light wouldn't go off after I read a mesage. (I blame this on Light flow, though).

3. Suddenly neither my ringer nor alert tone for at least some of my contacts is working, only vibrate. It won't also won't make a sound when I go into the the specific contact and play around with different ringtones and alerts -- none would sound.

A few minutes after I noticed it, it started working again. Then stopped again. Now I've rebooted, and it's working fine again. For now. What's going on?? This one is a big deal.

4. Sometimes a new text will come in, and I'll go into messaging, and the first text I'll see might be an old one from a different contact.

What do you guys think? Are these normal glitches with easy fixes, or a sign of two years of headaches to come?
 

spinedoc77

macrumors G4
Jun 11, 2009
11,488
5,413
What are examples in ways you think it's better? Ok google is indeed excellent for searches, but it also works fine for sending texts or making calls. What is Siri doing differently or better?

It just does some silly things sometimes and crams an internet search down your throat all the time. One example I use a lot, and it still does this, I say "call Mario" and it does an internet search for super Mario bros sometimes, other times it calls my contact.

Making phone calls is annoying as well, when I press my Bluetooth button I get this weird google voice assistant which isn't google now but some very basic horribly interfaced app that looks like a high schooler put it together.

Also silly stupid little things, like the google chime on a Bluetooth earpiece is VERY loud, like dangerous to your ear loud. You also have to hit a button to confirm things like reminders, kind of ruining the point of having a voice activated hands free assistant. There are many more little annoyances I have with google voice.

I like google now, I just think as a personal assistant it's not very good.
 

MasterRyu2011

macrumors 65816
Aug 22, 2014
1,064
359
Does google now work as good on iphone?

I'm thisclose to returning my new Galaxy s4 after a few days. Awesome when it works, but so far this the folllowing has happened:

1. The phone didn't honor the one minute screen time-out I'd set but stayed on indefinitely. A reboot fixed it, for now.

2. I've gotten "kindle closed unexpectantly" messages at at least three times so far.

3. Had a couple of times the light flow LED light wouldn't go off after I read a mesage. (I blame this on Light flow, though).

3. Suddenly neither my ringer nor alert tone for at least some of my contacts is working, only vibrate. It won't also won't make a sound when I go into the the specific contact and play around with different ringtones and alerts -- none would sound.

A few minutes after I noticed it, it started working again. Then stopped again. Now I've rebooted, and it's working fine again. For now. What's going on?? This one is a big deal.

4. Sometimes a new text will come in, and I'll go into messaging, and the first text I'll see might be an old one from a different contact.

What do you guys think? Are these normal glitches with easy fixes, or a sign of two years of headaches to come?

Google Now on an iPhone is not as convenient as its counterpart on Android, as expected. You can't just swipe left or up from the home button to launch it. You will have to click on the Google app. However, in terms of the content and notifications within the Google Now page, it's pretty comparable. You will get pretty much the same Google Now cards that you're accustomed to on Android. You can even say "Ok Google" on the Now page and start performing a search.

I can't speak for the S4 owners. Some of your issues may have to do with TouchWiz, but others may be isolated to your hardware. Maybe attempt to factory wipe it and see if that clears things up.

I can say though that an app crashing is not an uncommon experience in either iOS or Android. I've read somewhere that Android is actually more transparent as far as letting you know that an app has crashed, where on iOS, it does so more subtly but you can look at the logs to see the crash details. All of your other issues are definitely not a norm for me on the Android front. I'm using a near stock Android phone though. Having a layer of software tweaks can do funky things I would suppose.

My iPhone 5 though is seeing daily crashes and slowdown after iOS 8. Battery life was also drastically diminished. Though I wonder if it's related to that battery recall. I haven't installed the latest update (it seems to only improve the 4S experiences)
 

iososx

macrumors 6502a
Aug 23, 2014
859
6
USA
Two Best For Me

Your needs, preferences and workflows are what makes the phone you like, the very best for you.

I would have never guessed my two best phones, from two different platforms would arrive within a week of each other.

My iPhone 6 Plus and Nexus 6 are far and away the finest smartphones I've owned. On the iOS side I put up with tiny iPhones until finally Apple decided to become relevant as well as wealthy.

On the Android side it's both the stunning advancement of Lollipop and the wonderful spacious 6.0" display that I love and benefit from. Suddenly I find myself setup with phones that will easily provide the speed, stability and usefulness that'll carry me for two years.

A very nice position to be in. :)
 

heycal

macrumors 6502a
Jul 25, 2013
826
22
Google Now on an iPhone is not as convenient as its counterpart on Android, as expected. You can't just swipe left or up from the home button to launch it. You will have to click on the Google app. However, in terms of the content and notifications within the Google Now page, it's pretty comparable. You will get pretty much the same Google Now cards that you're accustomed to on Android. You can even say "Ok Google" on the Now page and start performing a search.

I can't speak for the S4 owners. Some of your issues may have to do with TouchWiz, but others may be isolated to your hardware. Maybe attempt to factory wipe it and see if that clears things up.

I can say though that an app crashing is not an uncommon experience in either iOS or Android. I've read somewhere that Android is actually more transparent as far as letting you know that an app has crashed, where on iOS, it does so more subtly but you can look at the logs to see the crash details. All of your other issues are definitely not a norm for me on the Android front. I'm using a near stock Android phone though. Having a layer of software tweaks can do funky things I would suppose.

My iPhone 5 though is seeing daily crashes and slowdown after iOS 8. Battery life was also drastically diminished. Though I wonder if it's related to that battery recall. I haven't installed the latest update (it seems to only improve the 4S experiences)

Sorry about your battery problems.

Maybe it is touch wiz causing trouble for me. Who knows? I'll see if any of those big problems happen again, and also see how the daily little glitches and crashes wear with me for a few more days. Both light flow and light manager have given me fits. I tried each of them, but both are inconsistent and unreliable so far. (Having an excellent and customizable notification light was the number one reason for choosing Android over iPhone for me.)

Battery is not great on this phone, at least compared to the G2, which got about 5 hours screen Time On compared to about 3 hours for the S4.

Otherwise love so much about this phone. Fantastic in many ways. Android is leagues above iphone in features and efficiencies -- when it works. It's kind of like comparing a Model T to a loaded new Mercedes. But if the Model T runs fine while you have to constantly tinker under the hood of the fancy Mercedes, where does that leave you?
 
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Tsepz

macrumors 601
Jan 24, 2013
4,888
4,698
Johannesburg, South Africa
Does google now work as good on iphone?

I'm thisclose to returning my new Galaxy s4 after a few days. Awesome when it works, but so far this the folllowing has happened:

1. The phone didn't honor the one minute screen time-out I'd set but stayed on indefinitely. A reboot fixed it, for now.

2. I've gotten "kindle closed unexpectantly" messages at at least three times so far.

3. Had a couple of times the light flow LED light wouldn't go off after I read a mesage. (I blame this on Light flow, though).

3. Suddenly neither my ringer nor alert tone for at least some of my contacts is working, only vibrate. It won't also won't make a sound when I go into the the specific contact and play around with different ringtones and alerts -- none would sound.

A few minutes after I noticed it, it started working again. Then stopped again. Now I've rebooted, and it's working fine again. For now. What's going on?? This one is a big deal.

4. Sometimes a new text will come in, and I'll go into messaging, and the first text I'll see might be an old one from a different contact.

What do you guys think? Are these normal glitches with easy fixes, or a sign of two years of headaches to come?

It sounds like an app is causing havoc, that or you got a very faulty unit. I had a GS4 since launch day last year and I never had any of those issues, I actually set my screen time-out to 2mins as 1min was too short when reading on a website, it would time-out on time.

Do you have any sort of mods installed? It sounds like your phone has an app that has made it unstable, apps like Light Flow that mess with hardware may cause problems if the dev. has done a poor job.
 

balamw

Moderator emeritus
Aug 16, 2005
19,365
979
New England
Though I wonder if it's related to that battery recall.

Don't discount that!

My wife and I both just got new batteries in our iPhone 5´s. Even though she is still on iOS 7, her battery life came back to what she had before.... For the past two months she suddenly went from easily lasting two days on a charge to not making it through the day!

Mine was replaced due to the sleep/wake recall reformatted for my son and has excellent battery life now on IOS 8. His usage is low though so I don't have a great gauge for it.

My old iPhone 4 was also having battery problems. I bought an iFixit kit and gave it to my younger son. He's also a relatively light user, but we had been using the 4 as a remote for Apple TV and the battery was draining fast.

iPhone 5's are nearing the two year mark and would be advisable to replace the battery anyhow...

B
 

jamezr

macrumors P6
Aug 7, 2011
16,077
19,077
US
Don't discount that!

My wife and I both just got new batteries in our iPhone 5´s. Even though she is still on iOS 7, her battery life came back to what she had before.... For the past two months she suddenly went from easily lasting two days on a charge to not making it through the day!

Mine was replaced due to the sleep/wake recall reformatted for my son and has excellent battery life now on IOS 8. His usage is low though so I don't have a great gauge for it.

My old iPhone 4 was also having battery problems. I bought an iFixit kit and gave it to my younger son. He's also a relatively light user, but we had been using the 4 as a remote for Apple TV and the battery was draining fast.

iPhone 5's are nearing the two year mark and would be advisable to replace the battery anyhow...

B
You reccomend replacing the iphone 5s battery after 2 years?
My son has a 5s and he complains the battery doesn't last as long as it used to. Is this a well known issue? Will they do this under warranty at an Apple store?
 

balamw

Moderator emeritus
Aug 16, 2005
19,365
979
New England
You reccomend replacing the iphone 5s battery after 2 years?
My son has a 5s and he complains the battery doesn't last as long as it used to. Is this a well known issue? Will they do this under warranty at an Apple store?

It certainly worked well for my 4 and two separate 5 (not 5s) devices. The 4 was 4 years old and $25 plus 20 minutes of my time took it from unusable outside the house to useful again!

The 5 devices were out of warranty, but replaced for free by Apple under separate recalls.

I don't believe the 5S has any recalls and is only 1 year old so if you don't have AppleCare you'd be out $79 for a replacement at Apple or find a third party to do it or buy a kit from iFixit. The 5/5S are a bit harder to replace than the 4/4S.

B
 

jamezr

macrumors P6
Aug 7, 2011
16,077
19,077
US
It certainly worked well for my 4 and two separate 5 (not 5s) devices. The 4 was 4 years old and $25 plus 20 minutes of my time took it from unusable outside the house to useful again!

The 5 devices were out of warranty, but replaced for free by Apple under separate recalls.

I don't believe the 5S has any recalls and is only 1 year old so if you don't have AppleCare you'd be out $79 for a replacement at Apple or find a third party to do it or buy a kit from iFixit. The 5/5S are a bit harder to replace than the 4/4S.

B
Thanks! Sorry I mis-read your comment. I thought you said 5s but you were saying 5 s as in more than one iphone 5. :)
 

geoff5093

macrumors 68020
Sep 16, 2014
2,251
2,564
You reccomend replacing the iphone 5s battery after 2 years?
My son has a 5s and he complains the battery doesn't last as long as it used to. Is this a well known issue? Will they do this under warranty at an Apple store?
Batteries deteriorate with each charge, after 2 years it's completely normal for them not to last as long as when they were new.
 

heycal

macrumors 6502a
Jul 25, 2013
826
22
It sounds like an app is causing havoc, that or you got a very faulty unit. I had a GS4 since launch day last year and I never had any of those issues, I actually set my screen time-out to 2mins as 1min was too short when reading on a website, it would time-out on time.

Do you have any sort of mods installed? It sounds like your phone has an app that has made it unstable, apps like Light Flow that mess with hardware may cause problems if the dev. has done a poor job.

Maybe it was light flow, or light manager. They were giving me constant headaches. That kind of stuff, and non impressive battery performance, made me exchange for a an iphone 6 yesterday. I like much about it, but I'm expecting to work very well.
 

heycal

macrumors 6502a
Jul 25, 2013
826
22
What are examples in ways you think it's better? Ok google is indeed excellent for searches, but it also works fine for sending texts or making calls. What is Siri doing differently or better?

So I just ditched my S4 in favor on an iphone 6 yesterday, and can now compare Siri and Google now -- at least as much as a newbie can in 24 hours. And my early thoughts are as follows:

1. "Ok google" on Android is far superior to the IOS version. On the Galaxy s4, I could say something like 'Call Angelo's Trattoria" -- an area restaurant not in my contacts -- and boom! That phone was ringing them up ASAP. On the iphone 6, I'll say "Call Angelo's Trattoria" and it will bring up the internet, with info about Angelo's and perhaps other similar places, and offer no option to call them.

Siri is slightly better in this regard, but still nowhere as good as Ok Google on Android. I'll say to her "call Angelo's Trattoria", and she will say something back like "do you want me to Angelo's Trattoria in in Orangesville?" and I'll say have to say 'yes' to confirm the action.

2. On composing and sending text messages, Siri seems much better than ok google. Faster, fewer steps.

That's about all I've tried out so far, but I do see something early and signficant differences.
 

wpautz

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Sep 28, 2008
13
0
Vancouver
Bought the Galaxy S5

So I ended up buying a Samsung Galaxy S5 on Black Friday. It was $0 with a 2 year contract, down from $200.

(We now have Black Friday in Canada even though our Thanksgiving is one month earlier).

I've had it over a week now. Android is cool. It looks sexier. I like it better than iOS.

Apple played catch up with bigger screens. Now they may have to play catch up with the OS.

A recent Forbes article says they have made way too many of these S5s. They are stockpiled somewhere. So I guess that will mean low resale value, but also low purchase price. That Black Friday price might soon be the normal price.

There are growing pains anytime you learn a new system. So far, the worst for me was trying to make it silent at night. Apple has this in the iOS, rather than through a third party app. The Apple one was not perfect (I don't think I could schedule 7 days individually. Some people have a weekend not on the weekend). But nearly perfect. It still sends you calls and notifications if it detects that you up despite your schedule silent time.

I wanted more storage and a better camera than the Nexus. And that price was the deal maker. I can't have only 16 gigs storage. So the Apple 6 64 gigs would have cost about $175 more than the Samsung. The SD memory cars was only about $20.

I have absolutely no regrets.








Thanks for all the advice.
 
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heycal

macrumors 6502a
Jul 25, 2013
826
22
.

There are growing pains anytime you learn a new system. So far, the worst for me was trying to make it silent at night. Apple has this in the iOS, rather than through a third party app. The Apple one was not perfect (I don't think I could schedule 7 days individually. Some people have a weekend not on the weekend). But nearly perfect. It still sends you calls and notifications if it detects that you up despite your schedule silent time.

Say what? Making any phone made today silent could not be simpler. Simply swipe down and press blocking mode on your phone. Voila! Phone is silent (but will still ring for your alarm, and any callers you designate).
 

mattopotamus

macrumors G5
Jun 12, 2012
14,738
6,109
Say what? Making any phone made today silent could not be simpler. Simply swipe down and press blocking mode on your phone. Voila! Phone is silent (but will still ring for your alarm, and any callers you designate).

on a samsung phone yes, but until lollipop a "do not disturb" mode had to come from a third party app or part of a manufacture skin.
 

heycal

macrumors 6502a
Jul 25, 2013
826
22
on a samsung phone yes, but until lollipop a "do not disturb" mode had to come from a third party app or part of a manufacture skin.

Samsung phones have this option as part of TW. The OP said he bought a S5 so he has it.

Right. Samsung, LG's, iphones, and probably all the others. It's a pretty simple built-in feature these days. Don't know when this "loollipop" thing arrived, but I think Samsungs and LG's have had this feature for awhile. Both the S4 and the LG G2 I tried had it without any third party app required.
 

david91

macrumors regular
Apr 15, 2015
138
9
It is my dream to have and experience an iPhone but I was stocked with my android for almost 2 years now. I like how safe it is from viruses and other things but the command is totally different. Just need a little practice with it.
 

macrem

macrumors 65816
Mar 11, 2008
1,438
102
This feels almost like a no-brainer with Android's newest update....

Reasons to Go Android
- Notification light: The android has a notification light that lights up different colors (muted colors, not a random bright awkward flash) depending on if you get text, etc.

- Material Design - This new design philosophy has got Google in the perfect realm of "simplicity" and "beautiful interface". Apple went too far on the "making things look super real" with skeumorphic, then went "lets go super super simple and go opposite of making things look like real items"... Google took the opportunity and found the balance between the two.. "Material Design". Make things look simple, but make them function "like" things in real life.. i.e. cards.

- Email - It has squares with images or initials next to every email address. You only get "images" if you are using the 6+, and only in the contacts App, not mail app. You can't install Google's email app and expect to see what you see in android either. Its simple and sleek.

- Better Notes App - Look at Google Keep, google it. Today's newest update to it makes Apple's notes app look like Notepad compared to the latest text editors out there, you can shove images, and even checkboxes/reminders into it. The only bad thing about it is you have to sync notes to google to get them off your phone, unlike Apple that allows you to sync the notes to your computer without touching Apple's servers.

- Better Translate App - If your like me and need to translate foreign languages, with the Google App, you can take a picture of something with the foreign letters and translate the text using the Translate App. Google decided to leave this feature out of the iOS version, maybe to get people to go to the Google side.

- Better Usage Graphs - If you look at the usage details on android phone, you get pretty graphs of everything and can even set a data usage limit and have it warn you when your about to hit it. Apple only keeps track of the usage per charge and its just the one number. Nothing that shows a graph of what happens over time.

- Better Maps App - The maps app is much more solid in google and has street view, this seems to be a trend where Google leaves Apple versions of Google's Apps more limited...

- Updates - The android phone seems to get updates every week with some improvement here and there to one or more apps. I find it hard getting used to Apple's iOS8 where there are barely any updates to the suite of apps used.

- Face Unlock - This is so cool, patented by Google... you can unlock the phone with your face. Google uses image algorithms to recognize your face so that instead of punching in numbers or using your finger, the camera looks at your face and in a split second unlocks your phone. If it doesn't, you can unlock it with a backup pattern and you can train the phone to recognize your face in other situations where it can't.

- Contacts App - OMG. This is the coolest looking contacts app that Apple has not got. The pictures of your friends actually take up a decent amount of real estate on the screen and looks simple and easy to use unlike Apples "listing of all your contacts without any photos". If you have contacts on your phone that you sometimes can't remember what they look like, Android makes so much more sense.

Okay, before you go on thinking I might work for Google or am an Android fangirl, you may be thinking why anyone would want to go Apple?

- Privacy - You don't have to sync everything to Apple servers if you don't want to, and you can get Notes off of it without having to sync to Google.

- Better Camera - The camera is much more solid, takes better photos all around.

- Battery Life - The way Apple handles processes is better than android, which leaves background processes running and eat up battery much faster. GPS is a much faster drain on battery with the Google than the Apple. Though Google's "Project Volta" is supposed to change that.

- More Solid, Less Random Crashes - Everything works, the thing about Android phones is apps crash.. randomly, unexpectedly. With the iPhone 6, there have been 0 crashes, even with multiple apps open at the same time. Even though some Apps are not as full with functionality like Android's versions that actually look a lot nicer in some cases, you can be sure your going to have less negative randomness.

- Music to Wake Up To - This may sound crazy, but you can't set a song from your library to wake up to with Android, you have to pick its standard set of sounds it comes with. If you want to be able to set an alarm with your music, then you want to get the iPhone.

- Better Media Player/Unified Storage - I don't like microsd cards, its nice that everything is on the phone and you can store gigantic music collections onto it without any removable storage. Now this one could be a "plus" for android, but I like Apple's "one drive" solution, the media player also feels more slick and built for music.

- Facetime/Video Chat - This is one of the most amazing things EVER!!!! You can video chat or call without using the phone, but just on wifi or any cellular connection. Skype exists, but it is horrible on iOS and is not all that great on Android and consumes more bandwidth and is more prone to crashing. Facetime is integrated into the OS without an App and it just works.

- Health - The healthkit is pretty new, but you don't have to keep track of steps you walk without installing any third party apps, its built right into the OS! Android does have some nice apps that keep track of this stuff, but you have to install them 3rd party.

- Fingerprint Sensor - This is another Apple plus, other phones have fingerprint sensors, but the Apple one is the best, It. Just. Works.

- Lightning Cable - Even though this isnt part of the phone, it is neat to be able to plug in a cable without having to fidget with the direction or orientation your inserting it in your phone. MicroUSB is nice for the android phones, but you have to actually think about how you insert it.

- Appstore - The Appstore is just so much more complete than Google's and all apps are reviewed, so the Apps are generally of higher quality and caliber unlike Google's where anybody can put anything up there and it'll get approved.

- Siri - Talk to the phone, so many languages, its not Cortana, but its still pretty good. Sounds better than Google Now.

Everything said... I have an iPhone 6, I love it... but Android is doing a good job wooing me back to their newer devices.
Nice, balanced overview!

Google intentionally crippled its Maps app on iOS by removing Street View... The thing is though on iOS you can still get Street View, etc. via 3rd party apps & despite not having Street View, Apple Maps works well, so I just stopped using Google Maps altogether on iOS.

I would miss the tight integration/Hand off features by switching to Android as my daily driver.

As I have not been using Android as my daily driver I have not been using Contacts, etc. and will check them out. Often when I want to use my Nexus 7 to compare features, it's lifeless as the battery went from almost fully charged to dead within in a few days of disuse... Keep seemed to me like a Jack of all trades, master of none app. For instance, why put reminders in this app? I'd rather use a separate reminders app that integrates very well with all my devices. For email on Android I never found one app that handles all my mail accounts equally and allows me to search across all of them as if they were one account, etc. The Mail app and also I would really miss features of Safari by switching the daily driver...

About OPs snowboarder comments, I am a snowboarder too. On a normal day i typically use 30-40% of my battery (iPhone 6) but on a snowboarding day I hardly use any and have not noticed any variations due to humidity. Unless you go so far back country that you could get lost several days, but then there should be a better rescue backup plan anyway. There are also cheap battery packs to recharge the internal battery. If you can afford this hobby, I doubt $175 makes or breaks the piggy bank on a device you will likely use for several years. I'd maybe start with a cheap non contract Android device alongside your iPhone so you can compare the differences over longer periods before investing in a new flagship device.
 
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knightjp

macrumors newbie
Aug 20, 2015
27
3
Dubai
The thing is though on iOS you can still get Street View, etc. via 3rd party apps & despite not having Street View, Apple Maps works well, so I just stopped using Google Maps altogether on iOS.
.

Told a friend that I would meet her in a specific location. She used Google Maps on her Android device, I used Apple Maps on mine. I found to location, but she got lost. Probably just a fluke, or a strange 'twilight zone' kind of moment when Apple Maps actually gets you to your destination.
We know the jokes and the countless memes on the internet. But so far, Apple maps has been working well for me.

I would put in my two cents and say that I know that Android always trumps iOS in terms of features, customizability, etc. It is a fantastic mobile OS, still you won't find me using an Android device. Worst comes to worst, if there is no more iOS, I'd rather use an ancient Blackberry or one that uses the latest Blackberry OS.
 
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