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Dallas
09-19-2012, 01:36 AM
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/tech/


Apple may have mollified the masses by adding significantly better specs to its smartphone offering, but when it comes to innovation, the iPhone 5 just can’t compete with the latest Android handsets. In fact, even after Apple’s johnny-come-lately improvements, Android phones have a number of key advantages over the iPhone 5.


1. Apple may be patting itself on the back over its move from a 3.5-inch to a 4-inch display, but in the smartphone size race, the iPhone 5 trails the field by a wide margin. In the Android world, the 4.3-inch Droid RAZR M is considered a "compact" phone, the 4.8-inch Galaxy S III is mainstream and the 5.5-inch Galaxy Note II is large.

2. Congratulations iPhone 5 users! You now get an extra row of icons that you didn't have with the iPhone 4 and 4S. That means you can see your TweetDeck icon and tap on it without scrolling over. The Times Square billboard writes itself: "iPhone 5: Now with More Icons!"

However, if you use any Android phone, you get more than just a static set of application icons on your 5 to 7 home screens. You have a working desktop you can fill with interactive widgets that show everything from the weather to your latest social media updates. I particularly dig the circles widget that Motorola includes on its Android phones, which shows you battery life, time, text alerts and local weather.

3. Apple doesn't gamble on immature technologies so perhaps its understandable that the company has yet to include this new-fangled thing called "email attachments" on its iPhone 5. While previous versions of iOS Mail didn't even present you with any attachment options in its message composer, the new iOS 6 mail on the iPhone 5 gives you the option to attach images or video only.

Just like Windows or Mac OS, Android allows you to attach any files you want to any email message. Whether you're using the Gmail app, its stock email app or any of a dozen third party email clients, there's always a prominent attachment option on the composition screen and, when you hit it , you're able to browse your gallery, your file system or any other apps you've installed that organize files (Dropbox, Quickoffice, etc).


4. If you own an iPhone 5, you can just forget about using mobile payment systems that let you touch your device to a reader in order to conduct a transaction. Instead of MasterCard's Tap and Pay, you'll be using tap and pray as you rap your fingers on a table and hope that Apple provides NFC support on the iPhone 6 in 2013.

With NFC support, the latest Android phones can not only send out payments, but also share photos, contacts, videos and more, just by tapping their backs together. Since Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, the OS has built-in NFC sharing software called Android Beam that any third party application can use for seamless sharing. Task management app Any.Do even lets you beam assignments to friends and family. I'm sure Apple will add this functionality just in time for iOS 8.


5. Try plugging an Android phone into your PC and mounting it as a storage device. You'll have access to all the files and folders, just as you do when you browse through your WIndows computer's C drive. So, if you want to copy a raft of MP3s or PowerPoint presentations to your Android handset, you can just drag and drop them.

Say you record a memo with Droid Record and want to grab its output files. You can navigate down to its folder and move, copy or share them directly from there. If you run a file browser on the phone itself, you can also dive into the file system from there.

So what happens when you plug the iPhone 5 into your PC? You get access the digital camera (DCIM) folder only so all you can do is drag and drop pictures. Yes, you can iTunes to transfer media files back and forth, but you still can't go directly into file system because Apple just doesn't trust you enough to let you see the folders on the iPhone 5 that you bought from them. Whose phone is it anyway?

6. With the iPhone 5, you can have any keyboard you want as long as its the stock iOS 6 keyboard. If you're using Android and you don't love Google's default layout, you're free to install a third-party keyboard that suits your needs.

Some of the best Android keyboards include Swype, which lets you create words by tracing between letters on the keyboard, and SwiftKey, which predicts the next word in your sentence to save you keystrokes. Heck, you can even buy an Android slider like the Motorola Droid 4, which has a real physical keyboard.


7. Most Android phones offer optional haptic feedback, which allows you to get a nice tactile vibration when you type, long press on the screen or tap the navigation buttons. While some people dislike haptics, the vibrations give you a strong acknowledgement that your touch has registered so you don't have to tap twice. Unfortunately, with the iPhone 5, you don't have a choice; just a flat screen that provides no feedback.


8. If you're like me, you have a drawer full of USB cables and, if you can't find one, you can always buy another on any street corner. When you upgrade from an old phone to a new one, you can still use the same old wires and charging plugs, because micro USB is a standard. In fact, the European Union requires phone manufacturers to use micro USB for charging, because it reduces waste as users hold on to their old cables rather than tossing them in a landfill.

Unfortunately, the iPhone 5 uses a proprietary connector it calls "lightning" instead of standard micro USB, but gets around the EU regulation by offering an adapter.Why not just use micro USB like every other company? Then you couldn't make a mint selling proprietary wires and making every iPhone 4S owner that upgrades buy new accessories, because older iPhones had an even larger proprietary dock connector.

9. With Android, every relevant app from the browser to the photo gallery includes a share button. When you tap share, you're given an extensive and universal list of apps you can share with. And that list grows, depending on what software and services you have installed, from Facebook to your SMS messenger to Bluetooth transfers. So if, for example, you join Pinterest and install its app, you can share directly to that from any app with a search button.

Rather than providing you with one share list to rule them all, the iPhone 5 lets each app developer create his or her own share menu, which has a finite list of services that developer feels like supporting. The default Safari browser and iOS photo gallery apps can only share to Facebook, Twitter, Email and messaging. Google, Flickr, Pinterest, Google Talk, and any of 100 other services need not apply.

10. "If you see a stylus, they blew it," Steve jobs famously said of pen-enabled computing and, like its predecessors, the iPhone 5 does not support pen input. Yes, you can get third-party capacitive styluses that will work on the iPhone 5, but these little sticks do nothing more than give you a thinner finger.

Want to scribble down some notes like you do on paper? On Android, you can. Samsung's Galaxy Note and LG's Intuition both offer large screens, active styluses and deep pen integration into the operating system.
On the upcoming Galaxy Note II, you can hand write notes on your calendar, on the backs of JPGs and in half a dozen other places throughout the OS. You can even get previews of emails, photos and videos by hovering the Galaxy Note II's stylus slightly above the screen.

CowboyMcCoy
09-19-2012, 01:44 AM
:stupid:

Hoofbite
09-19-2012, 02:41 AM
Couple of these are kind of silly.

3. Apple doesn't gamble on immature technologies so perhaps its understandable that the company has yet to include this new-fangled thing called "email attachments" on its iPhone 5. While previous versions of iOS Mail didn't even present you with any attachment options in its message composer, the new iOS 6 mail on the iPhone 5 gives you the option to attach images or video only.

Just like Windows or Mac OS, Android allows you to attach any files you want to any email message. Whether you're using the Gmail app, its stock email app or any of a dozen third party email clients, there's always a prominent attachment option on the composition screen and, when you hit it , you're able to browse your gallery, your file system or any other apps you've installed that organize files (Dropbox, Quickoffice, etc).

I'm pretty sure you can already attach videos and pictures. In fact, I'm positive. You just go through the camera and share the file. I've also emailed all sorts of files from Dropbox.

4. If you own an iPhone 5, you can just forget about using mobile payment systems that let you touch your device to a reader in order to conduct a transaction. Instead of MasterCard's Tap and Pay, you'll be using tap and pray as you rap your fingers on a table and hope that Apple provides NFC support on the iPhone 6 in 2013.

With NFC support, the latest Android phones can not only send out payments, but also share photos, contacts, videos and more, just by tapping their backs together. Since Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, the OS has built-in NFC sharing software called Android Beam that any third party application can use for seamless sharing. Task management app Any.Do even lets you beam assignments to friends and family. I'm sure Apple will add this functionality just in time for iOS 8.

This is one I was hoping for. Kind of disappointed it wasn't put in.

5. Try plugging an Android phone into your PC and mounting it as a storage device. You'll have access to all the files and folders, just as you do when you browse through your WIndows computer's C drive. So, if you want to copy a raft of MP3s or PowerPoint presentations to your Android handset, you can just drag and drop them.

Say you record a memo with Droid Record and want to grab its output files. You can navigate down to its folder and move, copy or share them directly from there. If you run a file browser on the phone itself, you can also dive into the file system from there.

So what happens when you plug the iPhone 5 into your PC? You get access the digital camera (DCIM) folder only so all you can do is drag and drop pictures. Yes, you can iTunes to transfer media files back and forth, but you still can't go directly into file system because Apple just doesn't trust you enough to let you see the folders on the iPhone 5 that you bought from them. Whose phone is it anyway?

Having it act as a mountable hard drive would be useless to me and probably 90% of the rest of cell phone users.

Memos are transferred to iTunes or can be sent from the phone itself if they aren't too large. I recorded an hour long lecture that wouldn't send one time.

Not sure this is a real awesome point. Then again, I use Dropbox and any file I open on the web can be saved straight to Dropbox, putting it on my computer before I get home. I wouldn't have any use for it.

6. With the iPhone 5, you can have any keyboard you want as long as its the stock iOS 6 keyboard. If you're using Android and you don't love Google's default layout, you're free to install a third-party keyboard that suits your needs.

Some of the best Android keyboards include Swype, which lets you create words by tracing between letters on the keyboard, and SwiftKey, which predicts the next word in your sentence to save you keystrokes. Heck, you can even buy an Android slider like the Motorola Droid 4, which has a real physical keyboard.

I'm not sure I would ever change it permanently, I've jailbroken the 3G and the 4 and never changed the keypad for more than a few seconds to check it out. Novelty, I suppose.

7. Most Android phones offer optional haptic feedback, which allows you to get a nice tactile vibration when you type, long press on the screen or tap the navigation buttons. While some people dislike haptics, the vibrations give you a strong acknowledgement that your touch has registered so you don't have to tap twice. Unfortunately, with the iPhone 5, you don't have a choice; just a flat screen that provides no feedback.

The phone is fast enough in response and my eyes do all the "input checking" that is needed to type something on a phone.

Maybe it's just me but I turned off all the click noises when inputting texts. I had some lagging when inputting things into the 3G but the 4 doesn't skip a beat. Push to vibrate would be nice. Maybe then I could just hold it over my genitals and tap the same key a few thousand times.

8. If you're like me, you have a drawer full of USB cables and, if you can't find one, you can always buy another on any street corner. When you upgrade from an old phone to a new one, you can still use the same old wires and charging plugs, because micro USB is a standard. In fact, the European Union requires phone manufacturers to use micro USB for charging, because it reduces waste as users hold on to their old cables rather than tossing them in a landfill.

Unfortunately, the iPhone 5 uses a proprietary connector it calls "lightning" instead of standard micro USB, but gets around the EU regulation by offering an adapter.Why not just use micro USB like every other company? Then you couldn't make a mint selling proprietary wires and making every iPhone 4S owner that upgrades buy new accessories, because older iPhones had an even larger proprietary dock connector.

Luckily I was blessed with the ability to remember that my cable usually just stays plugged into the same spot and how fortunate, the phone will come with one.

10. "If you see a stylus, they blew it," Steve jobs famously said of pen-enabled computing and, like its predecessors, the iPhone 5 does not support pen input. Yes, you can get third-party capacitive styluses that will work on the iPhone 5, but these little sticks do nothing more than give you a thinner finger.

Want to scribble down some notes like you do on paper? On Android, you can. Samsung's Galaxy Note and LG's Intuition both offer large screens, active styluses and deep pen integration into the operating system.
On the upcoming Galaxy Note II, you can hand write notes on your calendar, on the backs of JPGs and in half a dozen other places throughout the OS. You can even get previews of emails, photos and videos by hovering the Galaxy Note II's stylus slightly above the screen.

Yeah, just what I want. A toothpick to carry around at all times so I can ignore the fact that my phone will record my voice and jot down notes. Maybe if it had MS Paint I'd be intrigued.

Article should be re-titled, "9 Niche Features Not On iPhone".

masomenos
09-19-2012, 03:24 AM
The first point also falls flat because polling has found that most people want a 4"-4.5" screen. The screen size race is irrelevant for most people because there's a point where increased size means decreased usability.

TheCount
09-19-2012, 06:30 AM
The first point also falls flat because polling has found that most people want a 4"-4.5" screen. The screen size race is irrelevant for most people because there's a point where increased size means decreased usability.

They all fall flat because it's about what works best for the individual, not which phone can do what.

The bottom line is everyone should get what they like best. The whole Android vs iOS debate is asinine. There is no "Versus". It's about having choices, and that's why it's great that Windows, Android, iOS and even RIM exist.

Sam I Am
09-19-2012, 07:24 AM
Gotta disagree with you Hoof. The ability to mount the phone as a USB drive is awesome. It's probably the fact that you can't is the reason why you don't think it's useful.

Sam I Am
09-19-2012, 07:28 AM
The first point also falls flat because polling has found that most people want a 4"-4.5" screen. The screen size race is irrelevant for most people because there's a point where increased size means decreased usability.

This maybe true (I haven't seen any numbers), though it's always good to have options. If someone wants a bigger screen they should have that option.

That said. I finally saw a Galaxy Note. Dear lord that thing is big! I was a little worried when the Galaxy Nexus came out that it would be too large and was quite positively surprised. I'm extremely happy with it's size. That said, I'm not sure I would feel the same way about the Galaxy Note. It's the size of a Star Trek Tricorder just thinner! :laugh2:

Yeagermeister
09-19-2012, 07:32 AM
Gotta disagree with you Hoof. The ability to mount the phone as a USB drive is awesome. It's probably the fact that you can't is the reason why you don't think it's useful.

That's one of my favorite things about Android phones. I don't have to use itunes to copy music to my phone.

WoodysGirl
09-19-2012, 08:20 AM
They all fall flat because it's about what works best for the individual, not which phone can do what.

The bottom line is everyone should get what they like best. The whole Android vs iOS debate is asinine. There is no "Versus". It's about having choices, and that's why it's great that Windows, Android, iOS and even RIM exist.
I agree!


which is why I'm sticking with my Blackberry... :o:

BrAinPaiNt
09-19-2012, 08:23 AM
I agree!


which is why I'm sticking with my Blackberry... :o:

Blackberry should hire you to be an ambassador for them. ;)

Duane
09-19-2012, 08:33 AM
I agree!


which is why I'm sticking with my Blackberry... :o:
And Blackberry is thankful for having you as their (only) customer.

Sam I Am
09-19-2012, 08:34 AM
Blackberry should hire you to be an ambassador for them. ;)

Microsoft as their Internet Explorer ambassador too! :laugh2:

WoodysGirl
09-19-2012, 08:35 AM
Blackberry should hire you to be an ambassador for them. ;)
Nah, it's not that serious.. lol

I have the Torch, so I have the touch screen and the keyboard. It's a great phone to use to transition to a full touch screen.

Until I do transition, or until the phone dies, I'm keeping my keypad. I get all the apps that matter to me and I don't have any problems with the phone performance. I generally stay out of the phone wars convos, because I don't really see the big deal.

WoodysGirl
09-19-2012, 08:36 AM
And Blackberry is thankful for having you as their (only) customer.
:laugh2:

I'm sure I'm not the sole survivor... I have crackberry.com to prove it.

BrAinPaiNt
09-19-2012, 08:39 AM
And Blackberry is thankful for having you as their (only) customer.

There is a girl at work that still has one. Although she only went back to it after she lost her other phone.:laugh2:

But some people like that feeling of the keypad.

I imagine if I had started out with the keypad I would rather keep it as well. I know I do not care for the on screen keypads...but to be fair I also don't care for the keyboards on laptops either so there you go. :laugh2:

juck
09-19-2012, 08:47 AM
I like both products. However i recently added a Samsung Galaxy 3 to my arsenal and its a beast. The new iphone does NOT compare.

03EBZ06
09-19-2012, 09:33 AM
And Blackberry is thankful for having you as their (only) customer.

My work cell phone is blackberry, its pretty antiquated phone compared to my EVO4 LTE.

Dallas
09-19-2012, 10:58 AM
Gotta disagree with you Hoof. The ability to mount the phone as a USB drive is awesome. It's probably the fact that you can't is the reason why you don't think it's useful.

Totally disagree w/ Hoof also.. Good lord. All I have to do is plug my phone into my PC via USB and in 2 seconds I can copy w/e I want to it from it?

People don't want that? 90% he says? :lmao2: :lmao2: :lmao2:


Shyea.....riiiiiiight.

ConcordCowboy
09-19-2012, 12:35 PM
Reads like Johnson envy.

CanadianCowboysFan
09-19-2012, 12:45 PM
:laugh2:

I'm sure I'm not the sole survivor... I have crackberry.com to prove it.

I have the Torch as well, I like the keyboard but I know BB is dead so when my contract is up, probably will go to Android.

Kangaroo
09-19-2012, 01:11 PM
In some ways i miss my Blackberry and my old thumb wheel.

The new Touch screens are all cool and stuff but their is a lag between transitions and stuff where the old school balckberry had that response and boy could you fly with that thumb wheel.

What i find funny is a bunch of people that use to make fun of me and my Blackberry (before the iphone ever existed) I would never carry a phone that size well guess what most of them have a smart phone now. :laugh2:

Hey so I guess us geeks where trend setters back in the day :eek:

Phoenix
09-19-2012, 01:12 PM
Which one has a better, you know, telephone?

the kid 05
09-19-2012, 01:17 PM
http://i43.photobucket.com/albums/e390/KoRnKiD05/658465940_zpse3a067e3.jpg

there are alot of other ways both phones beat each other, just cause one is ran in a communistic way doesn't make it any less of a phone. But if you chose the one thats open and youre free to do as youd like you'd be on the winning side ;) (i'm biased though)

CanadianCowboysFan
09-19-2012, 01:32 PM
Which one has a better, you know, telephone?

telephone reception is so passe

SaltwaterServr
09-19-2012, 01:36 PM
telephone reception is so passe

:laugh2:

Its funny since I use my "phone" so little as a voice telecom device and more of a web-access device.

03EBZ06
09-19-2012, 01:54 PM
:laugh2:

Its funny since I use my "phone" so little as a voice telecom device and more of a web-access device.

Yup, same here. :D

a_minimalist
09-19-2012, 02:08 PM
I've been a huge advocate of Apple. I've even waited on a long line for the iPhone 4(I regret that). I'm strongly considering the Samsung Galaxy S3 over the new iPhone right now. Never in a million years did I think I would ever say that either.

My only drawback is I like how everything on my iMac will automatically sync to the iPhone; bookmarks and such.

Sam I Am
09-19-2012, 02:25 PM
telephone reception is so passe

Especially if you're just using VoIP. :laugh2:

Sam I Am
09-20-2012, 10:09 AM
Apparently, Android also beats the iPhone in maps (http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-19659736).

Images from the actual app. (http://theamazingios6maps.tumblr.com/)

I heard they removed Google Maps from the iTunes store too. So iPhone users are stuck with that mess.

BrAinPaiNt
09-20-2012, 10:24 AM
Apparently, Android also beats the iPhone in maps (http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-19659736).

Images from the actual app. (http://theamazingios6maps.tumblr.com/)

I heard they removed Google Maps from the iTunes store too. So iPhone users are stuck with that mess.

Don't think it was ever on Itunes store. I think it was just a built in app with the phone/ios.

Now with the new 6 IOS update it substituted the google app that was there originally with the apple version.

Just as there was a standard youtube app that came on the phone/ios. There was not a youtube download app from Itunes.

Now youtube made a separate downloadable app you can download and I imagine google maps will do the same. They had no reason to have a downloadable google map app before since it was already on the iphone. Now they will.

They got every other google app in the itunes store, lattitude, search, drive, earth, chrome and so on and so on. So it is not like apple is forbidding Google from having apps in the itune store.

Sam I Am
09-20-2012, 10:35 AM
Don't think it was ever on Itunes store. I think it was just a built in app with the phone/ios.

Now with the new 6 IOS update it substituted the google app that was there originally with the apple version.

Just as there was a standard youtube app that came on the phone/ios. There was not a youtube download app from Itunes.

Now youtube made a separate downloadable app you can download and I imagine google maps will do the same. They had no reason to have a downloadable google map app before since it was already on the iphone. Now they will.

They got every other google app in the itunes store, lattitude, search, drive, earth, chrome and so on and so on. So it is not like apple is forbidding Google from having apps in the itune store.

Ahh. I did not know that. Well, I did about the Youtube app, though Apple was the actually supplier of the Youtube app I believe. I don't believe Google actually coded that app. If I remember correctly, Apple just licensed calling it Youtube app with Google.

BrAinPaiNt
09-20-2012, 10:57 AM
Ahh. I did not know that. Well, I did about the Youtube app, though Apple was the actually supplier of the Youtube app I believe. I don't believe Google actually coded that app. If I remember correctly, Apple just licensed calling it Youtube app with Google.

This should give you some warm and fuzzy feelings down in your apple hating heart:laugh2:

http://news.yahoo.com/apple-ios-6-maps-app-awful-now-world-134533245.html

I never used the map feature on my phone, this was the first time I even looked at it as I noticed the icon was slightly different.

I use the map feature on my desktop on occasion when I am bored...just not on my phone.

Dallas
09-20-2012, 11:23 AM
This should give you some warm and fuzzy feelings down in your apple hating heart:laugh2:

http://news.yahoo.com/apple-ios-6-maps-app-awful-now-world-134533245.html

I never used the map feature on my phone, this was the first time I even looked at it as I noticed the icon was slightly different.

I use the map feature on my desktop on occasion when I am bored...just not on my phone.

:laugh2: Love it.


Q the sheep with "I never use maps on my iPhone anyways." :laugh2:


But seriously. You have to laugh about this decision by Apple. Why remove Google Maps? Why not just go ahead and remove GMAIL? What? That would REALLY irk the sheep? NEWSFLASH: Remove Google Maps has done just that.

Just an odd decision.

Sam I Am
09-20-2012, 11:31 AM
This should give you some warm and fuzzy feelings down in your apple hating heart:laugh2:

http://news.yahoo.com/apple-ios-6-maps-app-awful-now-world-134533245.html

I never used the map feature on my phone, this was the first time I even looked at it as I noticed the icon was slightly different.

I use the map feature on my desktop on occasion when I am bored...just not on my phone.

I heard the Apple version of Google Maps wasn't anywhere near as good as the Android version. It was missing stuff like Navigation and the like.

I tell you, Google Maps on Android is easily one of my most used apps. I use it for searching for stuff all the time rather than doing a normal Google search. Usually, I will use that or Google Now which I am completely hooked on too. It always gives me scores of my teams, train schedules, train delays, weather, restaurants near by, and even looks at my location and figures out how long it will take me to get to my next appointment and warns me when I need to leave to make it there on time. All of that without even searching or asking for it. It's all kinds of awesome.

BrAinPaiNt
09-20-2012, 11:54 AM
:laugh2: Love it.


Q the sheep with "I never use maps on my iPhone anyways." :laugh2:


But seriously. You have to laugh about this decision by Apple. Why remove Google Maps? Why not just go ahead and remove GMAIL? What? That would REALLY irk the sheep? NEWSFLASH: Remove Google Maps has done just that.

Just an odd decision.

Maybe I don't find myself lost and looking at a phone app on a regular basis ...now for those of you who do get lost on a regular basis and need a phone app for that...you can use the current one apple put on there, you can wait a few weeks until google puts one to download for free on itune, you can find a different map app on itunes or you can use google chrome or safari to go to a number of online sites where you can find maps. I am pretty sure any of those options can get you from point A to B even if it might not give you a pretty outdated satellite picture of something or even if someone does not know how to turn on the location settings in the phone.

In other words...of the things that are legit complaints of the phone (having to buy new cords or adapters or no USB/external storage card opiton)...this map thing just seems a little low on the OMG outrage meter for me.

Does not make me a sheep...it also doesn't make me a whiner over something so trivial.