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Glycerine
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So I am seriously contemplating getting one and I have read many reviews on the phone along with speculative reviews on IPhone 5. Any thoughts or experiences with the phone?
So I am seriously contemplating getting one and I have read many reviews on the phone along with speculative reviews on IPhone 5. Any thoughts or experiences with the phone?
haha. What got me thinking about contemplating other options was the Apple vs. Samsung battle over patents. Both sides are being a bit childish but it made curious about whether or not Apple seriously had the better product and why.I'm thinking of making the move away from Apple too. I'm just tired of their 'gate keeping' and copyright BS with MP3s and the fact that everything I do must be shunted through Itunes, which is a piece of shit bit of software, and a blatant front for data aquisition, as is the Iphone itself.
Oh, and Jobs was not an uber-genius. He was a marketeer, not a savior. Only in a super-consumerist society would anyone be conditioned to think that...(rant over)![]()
haha. What got me thinking about contemplating other options was the Apple vs. Samsung battle over patents. Both sides are being a bit childish but it made curious about whether or not Apple seriously had the better product and why.
I haven't owned an iphone but I've played with the ipad (my wife's), same O/S, and I have an android phone (Droid Bionic) and tablet (HP touchpad with Cyanogenmod 9 [Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich])...
Android is definitely the way to roll if you like to tweak/hack your phone, and like Uwace said it shows up as a USB mass storage device which is convenient. Guess it depends on how close you like to be to your computer hardware/how versatile you want it to be. I like having a device I can "just use" but then dive into its rusty innards and hack if need be, so Android suits me very well. That and having a phone in my pocket running Linux has been a dream of mine since the day I got my first cellphone.
But on the iPhone side of things, I've heard the application ecosystem is more mature/controlled and I've read developers tend to release iPhone apps before they release comparable Android apps. But that's a market thing, and bound to change as time goes on (and as Android gains marketshare). Oh and at least for the iPad, the media on the phone is married to iTunes--adding pics, music, etc. requires you run iTunes to manage it all. My Droid Bionic otoh works with Windows Media Sync and the picture/music folders are exposed for manually drag&dropping stuff when you plug it in. There are more hardware gadgets, i.e. docks/alarm clocks/etc. compatible with the iPhone.
Hardware-wise, I think the iPhone 5 puts Apple back on even footing with the Android offerings (all 4G LTE capable, dual-core 1GHz+ processors, etc.)
I've heard Siri is mostly a gimmick, a coworker bought the 4S and everyone was impressed & playing with Siri but since then I've never heard him use it. There are Android apps out there which provide similar functionality.
Ah yeah now that I'm looking at the specs, Samsung's already raised the bar again. Seems the android mfr's are about 1 year ahead of Apple in hardware.S3 is quad core.
I own a Galaxy SIII. My only complaint with the SIII is due to my geographical area, where there are areas of spotty coverage. The SIII really shines when your near a 4g coverage. If you have anything less than 50 percent of reception the phone is nearly useless when making phone calls and browsing the internet or using apps that require internet service, which nearly all apps require.
is this some issue with that particular phone, or does this happen with other phones too and is just due to crappy connections in the area?
That's for the international version. In the U.S., it's a Snapdragon dual core processor because the quad core doesn't work with LTE yet from what I heard. However, I think the Samsung Galaxy Note 2 (speculated to come out in mid-November) will have quad core for LTE.S3 is quad core.
That's for the international version. In the U.S., it's a Snapdragon dual core processor because the quad core doesn't work with LTE yet from what I heard. However, I think the Samsung Galaxy Note 2 (speculated to come out in mid-November) will have quad core for LTE.
The Galaxy Note 2 has better overall specs but GSIII has a higher resolution screen. Also, there is a a noticeable screen size difference: 5.5 inches vs. 4.8 inches.
[MENTION=16031]MXZCCT[/MENTION]: there is a big difference in resolution between the RAZR and the GSIII but RAZR HD has slightly higher resolution than GSIII.
Since I have been spoiled by the Retina Display of the IPhone 4, screen resolution is something I am carefully considering.