All my friends at work were really shocked when I changed, but some have followed when I showed them my S3.
There is no poll option for "I'm coming along as well."
People are puzzled I'm such a huge Apple proponent when it comes to Macs (I'm constantly recommending iMacs or MacBooks to friends/families) and to a lesser extent tablets too, but then will turn around and strongly recommend Android when it comes to smartphones.
That's interesting, I find that I'm the opposite. I recommend iPhone to people but, after buying a Macbook Air earlier this year, I don't think I would recommend Macs.
Really? What's wrong with the new Airs? I have core 2 duo late 2010 version that still works like brand-new.
I changed my underwear from Hanes to Fruit-of-the-Loom. No one seems to care in my family. Why should a phone be any different?
Do you announce it whenever you change underwear brands? Or do people look down there to find out...? ._.
I too have an iPad, macs, and ATVs. It seems a challenge to lose the iPhone and bring an outsider into the mix.I'm still on iOS, but I experiment with other platforms. For me, I think it will always be Apple for the in home experience. My main computer, the apple TV, and an iPad at home. But in my pocket... I like to test drive other platforms.
The biggest thing I hear from my friends is "but the ecosystem, all that money you spent on apps!" And I'm not worried about that because like I said, I like to keep an iPad around either way.
The ecosystem, facetime, and iMessage are really the big three. Android has more or less caught up as far as app selection goes, and google has their own ecosystem as well. I have never used facetime (btw what ever happened to that being an open standard?) and iMessage is cool, but hardly any kind of deal breaker.
That's interesting, I find that I'm the opposite. I recommend iPhone to people but, after buying a Macbook Air earlier this year, I don't think I would recommend Macs.
Yeah, I wouldn't recommend a mac to a hardcore gamer.
Gaming aside there are some things in OSX that make me think that Apple put some stuff in to differentiate from Windows but things less easily functional.
Two quick examples are:
- when pressing the red "x" to close something, it doesn't actually fully close it and you have to press cmd+q or close from the menu.
- if you have multiple windows of the same program open or get a few popups (best example), then you have to go to mission control -> click on the popup which will put it on top of your other windows -> close it then back to mission control if there are others to close. The Windows alternative is that all the windows stack in the toolbar and you can close from there or you can alt+tab to the window and close it.
Yeah, I never really understood the difference between Apple-W and Apple-H. Sounds like both do the same thing? Maybe they do different things internally with the RAM/Processor? I don't know. I don't mind differentiating. I usually hit Apple-Q to fully quit programs.
I feel you about the second thing. Just takes some getting used to. I'm on a 27 inch Thunderbolt display (paired with my MBA) so I usually just have all my programs spaced out nicely. It's definitely more a problem when I'm just using my MBA on its own measly 13" screen.
Still, I love OSX over Windows for many reasons. And ever since I switched my parents to the iMac, they never bother me about issues anymore.