Usually the cases ended up being crappy and had no reviews so I had no idea what I was getting.
Why didnt you buy items that had reviews?
IMO, a pretty moot point considering all the major players in the screen protector/case market provide products for all the flagship phones.
No. When choosing a device, accessories are very far down my list. I buy a case and a screen protector and I'm good to go. Don't need 3,934 options.
Are the accessories! Granted I own a Note 3 and fully expected the amount of accessories would be far less than say the the iPhone or the small Android phones out there. However this has me seriously considering a return to the iPhone 6 5.5". I love Android and the form factor of the Note 3, however I miss the endless supply of accessories the iPhone has. Anyone else out there considering a return to the iPhone because of this?
I don't buy a case or a screen protector.
isn't it a little on the ironic side that the universal Micro USB has LESS accessories than the proprietary Apple Connectors, awkward...
I think it has more to do with software than hardware. Companies make accessories with the lightning port because they know all apple hardware (with lightning connector) will behave the same way, send the same information, etc.I don't buy a case or a screen protector.
isn't it a little on the ironic side that the universal Micro USB has LESS accessories than the proprietary Apple Connectors, awkward...
The only thing I honestly miss from my iPhone is the automatic backups. However I am finding ways with Android for that (like Google+ always backing up new photos, contacts stored with my gmail, etc). Still getting used to Android but not going back to an iPhone (phones cost less plus monthly fees are way cheaper).
The lack of auto-backups is a huge sore spot in the Android user base. No one can understand why that isn't a feature at this point.
Android L is 'rumored' to have this. The code is there, I just think the sheer amount of data storage required may be something Google has to figure out. Remember, there are hundreds of millions more Android devices than iOS devices.
It's that fragmentation that hurts android
I never have a problem finding things for Android phones. Chargers are easy to find, cases, screen protectors, headphones, wireless chargers(though ive never bought one).....what else is there that you need? You would have to be more specific because im no following how that would be a factor at all.
Its never a factor for me when choosing a phone. Ill be able to find what i need.
Fragmentation may not be an issue if Google limits the feature to only those devices running on 'L'. If they allow all devices, then I see issues.
Nexus, GPe, Silver, One and Motorola Moto series usually (or in the case of Silver and One devices) get updates within days to a couple of weeks of release. US and Canadian carriers are the ones that tend to screw over the Android releases these days for OEM phones.I think you'd still have issues if you did that. Not all android phones will get L, especially not at the same time. So a system image backup is only for devices with L? That wouldn't sit well especially since other than nexus devices other oems don't get day 1 updates
The lack of auto-backups is a huge sore spot in the Android user base. No one can understand why that isn't a feature at this point.
Although I agree that backup is an omission to some extent, how often is it needed and what for? TBH, If my phone bricks (none have so far) it would be a slight pain but nothing more to reinstall apps, as far as I can see texts would be lost but that doesn't bother me, photos are kept in the cloud anyway, music and media the same and on external card, documents are on Drop Box, contacts, calendars, e mails etc, etc. are not lost Is it just the set up of the phone? What am I missing that is so important that it needs automatic backups?
I'm under the impression that it is mostly for people like us that frequent these boards that it is an issue rather than "a huge sore spot in the Android user base," real world users don't bother that much.
Contacts, calendar, photos, data, etc don't bother me either. They all live in at least one other place and are easy to reconnect to on a new phone.
For me, the big thing that is missing is the restoring of apps, home screen shortcuts, and settings. I consider it quite a big inconvenience to have to do all this with a new phone.
I know play store can offer to download your old apps, but in my experience it does not keep a record of the state of specific devices (which would allow you to choose which device to restore from), it just keeps a record of all the apps you have installed in the past on any device.
I think non-techie users are wowed by iOS (and OS X via Time Machine) restore capabilities. Maybe not those who have not yet experienced it, but once they have people seem to be hugely impressed by it and it becomes a real draw of staying on iOS and OS X.
Yeah I get that too. AgreedContacts, calendar, photos, data, etc don't bother me either. They all live in at least one other place and are easy to reconnect to on a new phone.
For me, the big thing that is missing is the restoring of apps, home screen shortcuts, and settings. I consider it quite a big inconvenience to have to do all this manually with a new phone.
I know play store can offer to download your old apps, but in my experience it does not keep a record of the state of specific devices (which would allow you to choose which device to restore from), it just keeps a record of all the apps you have installed in the past on any device including the apps you no longer use.
I think non-techie users are wowed by iOS (and OS X via Time Machine) restore capabilities. Maybe not those who have not yet experienced it, but once they have people seem to be hugely impressed by it and it becomes a real draw of staying on iOS and OS X.
Although I agree that backup is an omission to some extent, how often is it needed and what for? TBH, If my phone bricks (none have so far) it would be a slight pain but nothing more to reinstall apps, as far as I can see texts would be lost but that doesn't bother me, photos are kept in the cloud anyway, music and media the same and on external card, documents are on Drop Box, contacts, calendars, e mails etc, etc. are not lost Is it just the set up of the phone? What am I missing that is so important that it needs automatic backups?
I'm under the impression that it is mostly for people like us that frequent these boards that it is an issue rather than "a huge sore spot in the Android user base," real world users don't bother that much.
The only thing that ever gets lost when transferring to a new Android phone is screen layout and app data. Everything else including texts, wallpaper, Calander, notes, Internet bookmarks and log in details, call logs, contacts, photos etc are persevered. I use a micro SD card so I can just pop that into the next phone and once my apps have re-downloaded I'm good to go.
The only thing that ever gets lost when transferring to a new Android phone is screen layout and app data. Everything else including texts, wallpaper, Calander, notes, Internet bookmarks and log in details, call logs, contacts, photos etc are persevered. I use a micro SD card so I can just pop that into the next phone and once my apps have re-downloaded I'm good to go.
Use Nova Launcher and built-in backup. New phone and you got your old layout back in no time
Having a complete system backup is nice to have but......it is not hard to reinstall apps. Pictures are synced on Dropbox. Contacts and calendar are on Google......Email Google and Hotmail synced through the cloud. The only benefit of a backup of apps would be the time saving and in app data.I agree, my point being though fellas is that really, the only time a backup will be needed is a catastrophic phone malfunction or when a new phone is purchased, both of which are hardly weekly events, its nice to have,
but as a feature, IMHO, overblown, TBH, I would rather have a waterproof phone.