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I removed notifications for most of the apps. Lot of games kids play on my phone. I hate to see lot of junk popping up in my notification screen (some dinosaur eggs hatching etc.,). Is it possible to remove them from IOS as well?

You can decide wether you want an old school alert, a Banner, only in Notification Center or nothing at all. You can chose wether you want a sound or not and you can decide if you want a badge on the home screen. All of that on a per app basis.

What comes to my mind while writing this is that you can also turn off background refresh on a per app basis, something i heard an android user complain about, not having it.
 
You can decide wether you want an old school alert, a Banner, only in Notification Center or nothing at all. You can chose wether you want a sound or not and you can decide if you want a badge on the home screen. All of that on a per app basis.

What comes to my mind while writing this is that you can also turn off background refresh on a per app basis, something i heard an android user complain about, not having it.

The app that comes to mind in this regard is/was Groupon... I remember when I had a Nexus 5, Groupon would easily dominate my battery usage and there was no way of turning off the notifications. I got a new notification every few minutes for a new Groupon and it was killing my battery. On iOS it was similar, except that I could disable it in Notification Center instead of having to uninstall it.
 
Changing your default keyboard is barely arriving on iOS right now. SwiftKey and Swype has been on Android for nearly half a decade.

Android also has launchers to change your UI and behavioral patterns with swipe gestures like All In One Gestures, Swipe Home Button, and gestures found on launchers themselves. Apple ripped off ideas from WhatsApp and Viber for their iMessages. Android has AcDisplay and DynamicNotifications which are Moto X Active Display-inspired. Android has Screen Off & Lock and can be linked to swipe gestures. Android has TubeMate which can download videos beyond just fron YouTube. Certain Android phones can do OTG. All can generally Bluetooth data transfer. Android has MoboPlayer which can do mini-player while doing something else.

I feel iOS may have prettier apps and fun time-wasting apps like many disposable games. But Android has had many useful settings/maintenance apps and ones that can improve the overall way you use and open apps or quickly glance at info. This is why I feel iOS still has ways to go.
 
Well, for the past years I thought Android had the advantage. But Google can never match the experience of continuity or design of iOS 8. Is is just unmatched and unfortunately I can never see myself get Android again now. The seamless
experience of iOS 8 + Yosemite is just awesome. Locked in :)
 
Changing your default keyboard is barely arriving on iOS right now. SwiftKey and Swype has been on Android for nearly half a decade.

Android also has launchers to change your UI and behavioral patterns with swipe gestures like All In One Gestures, Swipe Home Button, and gestures found on launchers themselves. Apple ripped off ideas from WhatsApp and Viber for their iMessages. Android has AcDisplay and DynamicNotifications which are Moto X Active Display-inspired. Android has Screen Off & Lock and can be linked to swipe gestures. Android has TubeMate which can download videos beyond just fron YouTube. Certain Android phones can do OTG. All can generally Bluetooth data transfer. Android has MoboPlayer which can do mini-player while doing something else.

I feel iOS may have prettier apps and fun time-wasting apps like many disposable games. But Android has had many useful settings/maintenance apps and ones that can improve the overall way you use and open apps or quickly glance at info. This is why I feel iOS still has ways to go.
But I think the iOS lock screen is way better than Active Display.
 
Changing your default keyboard is barely arriving on iOS right now. SwiftKey and Swype has been on Android for nearly half a decade.

Android also has launchers to change your UI and behavioral patterns with swipe gestures like All In One Gestures, Swipe Home Button, and gestures found on launchers themselves. Apple ripped off ideas from WhatsApp and Viber for their iMessages. Android has AcDisplay and DynamicNotifications which are Moto X Active Display-inspired. Android has Screen Off & Lock and can be linked to swipe gestures. Android has TubeMate which can download videos beyond just fron YouTube. Certain Android phones can do OTG. All can generally Bluetooth data transfer. Android has MoboPlayer which can do mini-player while doing something else.

I feel iOS may have prettier apps and fun time-wasting apps like many disposable games. But Android has had many useful settings/maintenance apps and ones that can improve the overall way you use and open apps or quickly glance at info. This is why I feel iOS still has ways to go. With Android, you just have more FREEDOM to create your user experience.
 
5 Features That Are Still Missing from IOS8

5 Features That Are Still Missing from IOS8

When it launches this fall, Apple’s iOS 8 will bring a mix of features to iPhones and iPads that match Android in some ways, as well as some that go beyond Google’s OS. On the catch-up front, there’s predictive typing, widgets (inside Notification Center), more sharing options for content, and the ability to swap out your keyboard for third-party options. Also, iCloud Drive appears to be an attempt to mirror the success of Google Drive.

Among iOS 8‘s more original innovations are Family Sharing, which enables up to six family members enjoy iTunes, iBooks and App Store purchases. We especially like the Ask to Buy feature, which lets parents approve their children’s purchases from their own devices. The new Health app also has potential, as it will sync with third-party apps and give you a single dashboard of your vital metrics, one that could be shared with your doctor for more expedient care.

However, iOS 8 falls short in some areas. Here are 5 features that are still missing from Apple’s platform — ones we hope that will arrive in subsequent updates.
Parental controls
Apple deserves credit for placing an emphasis on families with Family Sharing. Not only can you share iTunes purchases among multiple family members, iOS 8 will provide a shared family photo stream, a calendar and the ability to locate family members. Unfortunately, it doesn’t seem as though as Apple has beefed up its parental controls.
upload-(1).jpg

While you can still restrict certain apps and block content based on age rating, iOS 8 doesn’t let you set time limits for overall device usage. Amazon FreeTime feature for Kindle devices has done this for years, and the company recently added educational goals (such as reading for 30 minutes) to unlock rewards. Meanwhile, Samsung offers a special Kids Mode for its Galaxy S5, which provides a kid-friendly environment with only the apps you approve.
Transit Directions in Maps
At this point this feature should be a given in iOS, but it’s not. In order to get transit directions in the Apple Maps app, today you need to go through a third party like Google Maps. This takes you to another app, which is far from a seamless experience. Heading up to the launch of iOS 8, some believed that Apple would remedy this issue, but it seems that iPhone and iPad users will have to wait even longer.
img_0001-225x400.jpg


Beefed Up Control Center
Although iOS 8 makes welcome enhancements to Notification Center by streamlining the interface and adding widgets, it looks like Control Center may be left out in the cold. It’s not that we don’t like the feature; you can adjust everything from volume and brightness and toggle multiple settings just by swiping up from the bottom of the screen. However, unlike the Galaxy S5, you can’t customize your quick settings, nor can you long press on an option (like Wi-Fi) to further tweak your settings.
ios8controlcenter-579x400.jpg

Split-Screen Multitasking
This feature we’d like to chalk up to not being ready in time — or perhaps being tied to specific new hardware. Back in March, 9to5Mac reported that iOS 8 would get split-screen multitasking for the iPad. Now that the WWDC keynote has passed, it looks like you can probably forget about this feature coming to the iPhone, even a bigger screen iPhone 6.
upload.jpg

The rumors point to an interface change that would allow iPad users to not only display two apps side by side, but also drag and drop content from one window to another, similar to Samsung’s Multi Window feature. However, Samsung enables this functionality on both its Galaxy phones and its tablets. In fact, you can run up to four apps on the screen at once on the Galaxy Note Pro 12.2. Microsoft also allows you to “snap” up to four apps on the Surface Pro 3.

A More Dynamic, Personal Home Screen
I’m sure a lot of Apple fans will take issue with me calling this a missing feature, but the iconic home screen in iOS looks too darn familiar. Yes, it’s a risk to tinker with a formula that has become so second nature for millions of people. But that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t allow power users to tinker. iOS deserves something more dynamic and personal, even if Apple doesn’t go as far as HTC’s BlinkFeed or Samsung’s My Magazine UX.
ios8homescreen_203400.jpg

If you look at the iOS 8 home screen, you would be hard pressed to tell any substantial differences between this release and iOS 7. The only notable addition is the Health app. To be far, iOS 7′s flat makeover was a pretty big shift, but the home screen shouldn’t stay stagnant forever. How about not confining the widgets to Notification Center, or allowing for variable sizes for app icons, similar to Windows Phone?

Bottom Line
The iOS 8 story is far from over, as there are hundreds of new features that Apple didn’t get a chance to cover during its WWDC unveiling. However, based on what I know at this stage, there are still gaps in the platform that the company should fill. Some of my wish list items may be addressed after launch, and others may have to wait (like split-screen multitasking) for new hardware. But I wouldn’t wait until iOS 9.

http://blog.laptopmag.com/ios-8-missing-features
 
It's starting to get to the point where Apple is giving us all the features we ever wanted in iOS. People are quick to say they are "copying" but if you really think about it, all these OS's basically have the same features...Apple is just always last bringing them to their OS. Hell, it took us a whole year just to get basic C&P. Lol
 
It's starting to get to the point where Apple is giving us all the features we ever wanted in iOS. People are quick to say they are "copying" but if you really think about it, all these OS's basically have the same features...Apple is just always last bringing them to their OS. Hell, it took us a whole year just to get basic C&P. Lol
I agree......i think what gets the blood boiling is the position from most Apple fans that Android has copied IOS from the beginning. Stolen product as SJ said. So now when IOS is adopting Android features some dismiss it or ignores the facts.
But I agree with you.....it is in the best interest of the consumer if features are borrowed from both OSes......the consumer wins in this scenario....
 
For people who want iOS like banners, here is your solution:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.nlucas.notificationtoasterlite

You can also check out other apps from the same Dev. He makes amazing lockscreen apps and I am using locker pro 2, and it is PERFECT. I get notifications just like on iOS, and I can perform actions on each one directly on my lock screen.

I also prefer the banners as well. I hate how I miss notifications in full screen apps on android. I hope google copies the banners in android 4.5/5.0 :)
 
The app that comes to mind in this regard is/was Groupon... I remember when I had a Nexus 5, Groupon would easily dominate my battery usage and there was no way of turning off the notifications. I got a new notification every few minutes for a new Groupon and it was killing my battery. On iOS it was similar, except that I could disable it in Notification Center instead of having to uninstall it.

Is that true? If you drag your app to the "App Info" from the app drawer, you can uncheck "Show Notifications". That should stop it.

----------

For people who want iOS like banners, here is your solution:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.nlucas.notificationtoasterlite

You can also check out other apps from the same Dev. He makes amazing lockscreen apps and I am using locker pro 2, and it is PERFECT. I get notifications just like on iOS, and I can perform actions on each one directly on my lock screen.

I also prefer the banners as well. I hate how I miss notifications in full screen apps on android. I hope google copies the banners in android 4.5/5.0 :)

It's interesting. That's the exact reason why I hate the banner notifications, precisely because it interrupts whatever full-screen app I'm in (usually a game so the banner is really distracting).

If you're in a full-screen app, wouldn't you hear the buzz/notification tone? Or wouldn't the notification light blink? I find that's enough to let me know I have a notification and if I deem it worth pausing my game for, I can pause, and pull down my notification to act on it or even switch to it. I don't think that's much different than on iOS, right (I mean, if I wanted to act or switch to it on iOS, I'd have to also pause whatever I'm doing)? Except the difference on Android is I don't get an obtrusive interruption.

I'm 100% with you on lock screen notifications, though. It's nice that Android has third party apps that can add that feature. I really hope Motorola expands on the Active Display feature in their next Moto X.
 
Is that true? If you drag your app to the "App Info" from the app drawer, you can uncheck "Show Notifications". That should stop it.

Hmm, looking at that, that should work. I have no clue how or why I never did that. I just remember getting frustrated w/ seeing Groupon as my number 1 battery usage and had enough of it.
 
Is that true? If you drag your app to the "App Info" from the app drawer, you can uncheck "Show Notifications". That should stop it.

----------



It's interesting. That's the exact reason why I hate the banner notifications, precisely because it interrupts whatever full-screen app I'm in (usually a game so the banner is really distracting).

If you're in a full-screen app, wouldn't you hear the buzz/notification tone? Or wouldn't the notification light blink? I find that's enough to let me know I have a notification and if I deem it worth pausing my game for, I can pause, and pull down my notification to act on it or even switch to it. I don't think that's much different than on iOS, right (I mean, if I wanted to act or switch to it on iOS, I'd have to also pause whatever I'm doing)? Except the difference on Android is I don't get an obtrusive interruption.

I'm 100% with you on lock screen notifications, though. It's nice that Android has third party apps that can add that feature. I really hope Motorola expands on the Active Display feature in their next Moto X.
A notification light or tone doesn't tell me whether or not the notification is important enough to pause the app and act on it.

The banner allows that.

I used to play modern combat sometimes and my fiance who lived overseas back then would text me, and on iOS I could always know it was her instead of "hey dude what's up" from a friend that could wait.

That is only one example.
 
A notification light or tone doesn't tell me whether or not the notification is important enough to pause the app and act on it.

The banner allows that.

I used to play modern combat sometimes and my fiance who lived overseas back then would text me, and on iOS I could always know it was her instead of "hey dude what's up" from a friend that could wait.

That is only one example.

Yeah, it's definitely nice to know exactly what it is. I just wish it didn't drop down and block/interrupt what you're doing on the screen. Sometimes it'll even block the top navigational buttons.

If Android adopts something like this, I hope it isn't as intrusive.
 
For people who want iOS like banners, here is your solution:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.nlucas.notificationtoasterlite

You can also check out other apps from the same Dev. He makes amazing lockscreen apps and I am using locker pro 2, and it is PERFECT. I get notifications just like on iOS, and I can perform actions on each one directly on my lock screen.

I also prefer the banners as well. I hate how I miss notifications in full screen apps on android. I hope google copies the banners in android 4.5/5.0 :)

Meh......id rather just get them on my lockscreen if im going to do that.
 
Yeah, it's definitely nice to know exactly what it is. I just wish it didn't drop down and block/interrupt what you're doing on the screen. Sometimes it'll even block the top navigational buttons.

If Android adopts something like this, I hope it isn't as intrusive.

Well, it can be optional, so I don't see the hesitation.

Currently you can block an app from posting notifications flat out by going to settings -> app and then app info. I can only imagine the next step for google is to allow even more control over how to display notifications from each app.

And on iOS, you could always turn off banners btw. The fine grain notification center controls let you choose whether to show alert, or banner, or nothing at all.

The notifier app I linked for android can also be configured to show only certain banners, or one can just choose to not use it. Options are cool.
 
Very cool concept but basically someone's iPhone wet dream. ;)

In reality, the next iPhone(s) will have only a fraction of that concept--no IR blaster or landscape stereo speakers, a lower res display, far less capable camera, and bigger bezels.

:(

I'm looking at the next Moto X and the next iPhone to become my daily driver. I guess we shall see.
 
If this is the new iPhone 6... + the potential of iOS 8... wow:

http://www.phonearena.com/news/New-...-Samsungs-Galaxy-S5-and-the-iPhone-5s_id56875

YouTube: video

:eek:

Looks like an HTC One - but without all the things I didn't like about it (thickness, big bezels, no iOS).

This would be unreal.....though better guess is a 4.7" display in the 400+ ppi range. 5" 500+ ppi displays are JUST now hitting mass production.

LG can do these things a bit faster because they make their own displays. So it makes sense their phone (the G3) is the first with a 500+ ppi display.

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Very cool concept but basically someone's iPhone wet dream. ;)

In reality, the next iPhone(s) will have only a fraction of that concept--no IR blaster or landscape stereo speakers, a lower res display, far less capable camera, and bigger bezels.

Mostly agree - though I don't think its too far fetched to say we'll see a 13 mp shooter with better optics in the larger body. I also think 6mm is thinner than they will go - 6.5 - 7mm is more likely.

Also lower res display, likely no IR blaster and the bezels will probably be a tad bit bigger at least at the top and bottom....unless that story about merging sensors into the display was late and its already happened versus simply being a series of patents.

I think the speakers could happen - I'd be all for it, though its more likely not happening.

Internally I think we'll see a quad core A8 with an M8 co-processor, 2 GB RAM and the standard storage options.

I did find the design of the true tone flash (around the camera) quite interesting - though I don't know how practical that would be.
 
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A notification light or tone doesn't tell me whether or not the notification is important enough to pause the app and act on it.

The banner allows that.

I used to play modern combat sometimes and my fiance who lived overseas back then would text me, and on iOS I could always know it was her instead of "hey dude what's up" from a friend that could wait.

That is only one example.

You do know that any Android phone with an LED light has the option to make an LED light or tone specific to a personal contact? Additionally, I'm not sure what phones you used, but as of 4.3, rich notifications have been incorporated into Android, as they are now into iOS.
 
You do know that any Android phone with an LED light has the option to make an LED light or tone specific to a personal contact? Additionally, I'm not sure what phones you used, but as of 4.3, rich notifications have been incorporated into Android, as they are now into iOS.

That could get complicated depending on the different notifications you get (text, facebook, email, tweet, etc) and how many people you want to differentiate between.

At some point, 13 shades of blue just look like blue ;)
 
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