Hi all,
I've been using an iPhone since the days of the 3Gs but after multiple demos with the iPhone 7+, I'm just not convinced that I need to invest another $900 to get an experience that's almost the same as my iPhone 6+.
Therefore I've started to take a serious look at Pixel XL. Here's my question:
If you switched from an iPhone to the Pixel, what do you think of the Google phone compared to your old iPhone?
Many thanks and cheers!
I'm using a Pixel XL now after moving from an iPhone 6s+ (and some time with a Nexus 6P inbetween). Additional background...I've been a longtime iPhone and Apple hardware user dating back to 2008, but have been using Android to some degree (periods as full time phone, a bunch of tablets) so I'm quite familiar with both OS's.
I've only been using it for about a day and a half so take what you will from that. First impressions---the phone is rock solid, best Android phone I've presonally used (my history...Galaxy Nexus, Nexus 4, Note 2, HTC One M7, Nexus 6P). It sounds cliche but it really is Google's iPhone. The build is rock solid, great fit and finish, feels terrific in hand (slightly smaller than the iPhone 6/6s/7+ models). The display is crisp and bright, as good as my 6s+ and far better than the 6P. Only limited time with the camera but it's really fast (problem with all past Nexus phones) and initial results are quite good. In a vacuum, considering nothing but the phones themselves, I find the Pixel XL to be every bit the equal, if not better than my 6s+. I won't presume to claim it's better than the 7+ as I haven't used one for more than a few minutes but didn't find the changes signficant enough in the 7+ to make it a worthwhile upgrade from my 6s+.
There are also a tons of aspects of Android, if you're not familiar with the OS, that simply outshine iOS--nearly infinite customization, ability to choose default applications, superior virtual assistant, far less sharing restrictions, better notification system. It has some flaw as well--messaging, app quality can lag behind iOS, inconsistent experience across hardware, to name a few. You'll have to just dive in to decide what appeals to you more.
All that being said, I don't use my phones in a vacuum and sadly, most of my reservations about switching back full time to Android are starting to rear their ugly head with the Pixel too--and they're nearly all ecosystem related. I use Macs, iPads (as do my family) and own an Apple Watch. I prefer Safari on my iPad and mobile phone and the Continuity/Handoff and more importantly, the content blocking benefits it affords when used across all my hardware. Chrome is garbage on tablets and while I've warmed to it on Android phones, it still find the UI a step down from Safari and not having content blocking is becoming quite irritating. Also miss having immediate access to all my iMessages and SMS/MMS across all my devices--AirDroid and MightyText are OK but not as seamless. Sharing content via iMessage or AirDrop far easier than what I have to do when on Android. Clearing my notifications on my Pixel doesn't sync across my other devices (though it isn't alway successful when on an iPhone either, but still better).
The thing I miss most though is my Apple Watch. The Android Wear experience is simply inferior to watchOS is nearly all regards. The latest version of Android Wear was initially supposed to be released by now so I was hoping for an improved user experience but sadly, it's been delayed until sometime next year. My Huawei Watch is aesthetically nicer (IMO), having an alway on display option and the greater ability to customize your watchface are advantages the Apple Watch doesn't have, but that where they stop. So while the user experience of Pixel XL = iPhone 6S+, Pixel XL/Huawei Watch << iPhone 6s+/Apple Watch.
I'm going to keep using the Pixel XL for at least 2 weeks and probably will keep it, even in spite of the lesser
overall (re: ecosystem) experience because I'm quite unhappy with Apple's direction/progress over the last few years and the only way to voice my displeasure is with my wallet. However, If I ultimately decide to do so imposes too many compromises, I'll just be switching back to my 6s+ and not upgrading to the 7+. Apple won't be getting any significant amount of $ from me until I see some signficant changes in their direction.