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Android or iOS?
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The price is certainly super attractive. Don't they use Android as an operating system?



Not even a Goodreads app at your phone, Ian? -:)


Yeah, if you spend most of the time near bigger gadgets, you don't need the mobile as your portal into the cyberspace..
As the cellphone is pocket fit, the natural use is when one is out of home/office/yacht/ferrari

I try not to distract the driver while doing that

We lesser mortals would dearly love to take one onto a nice twisty turny road :-)

As a lesser mortal, I use an Android for calls, texting, occasional Internet. Use my laptop for research, word processing, email.


Had a driver though for some years, as did every even quarter -, half - or full manager in former Soviet countries -:)


Drinking is/was part of business ethics in those areas. You sign a contract - you raise a toast, make some money/lose some money/whatever the reason - the same, so having a driver is pretty much a must. Maybe even giving/taking a bribe inevitably led to a drinking spree -:)
I took my school mate for a driver. Although he has masters degree in chemistry and good command of English no less, he wasn't very particular in pursuing a career. He's all in diving and fishing, while working for living is an unwanted must for him. A friend is a friend, so never treated him as a subordinate of any kind and we are still friends long after our work ways parted.



I think, btw, statistics pretty much support this estimate.
A driver is a position of trust, I believe..

Sounds like Mother Russia indeed -:)
Hope it was a good travel and experience though


Yeah, in the terms of deficits of all kinds, it often happened, that stuff needed to be procured rather than simply bought..



I have been using Apple since 1986, when the choice was Apple or DOS, and the latter was taken up by businesses on the advice of "computer experts" because Apple was so easy to use they would be redundant. A well-written program then (and I had one) worked well until Ap-le switched to series 10 OS, and i am not sure how many MS programs could operate over that extended period. However, Apple now has developed bad habits, and the rort of requiring program updates is entrenched. As for batteries, I have a 9 year-old laptop and it still works so i haven't had to change the battery, although I admit its OS is starting to get too primitive for a lot of uses. I have never cracked a screen. I am not sure what the issue is with USB - my apple equipment can take USBs but I admit my desk computer is also getting fairly ancient. But the fact I can still use equipment 7 years later says something for the robustness of the design and construction.

I was limiting my comments to smart phones, though Apple has been gluing the batteries into some of their newer laptops. Apple does not want you being able to repair your phone. Instead they want you to peel off another $600-$800 every two years. Consequently, minor stuff that is easy on an android, like changing a battery, is a proprietary screw laced pain on an iphone. Plus when you opened it yourself, instead of taking it to an Genius Bar (they really aren't), you invalidate your warranty.
Re: USB
Apple removed direct USB compatibility from several of their recent iphones. Users were limited to Apple's proprietary Lightning cord, or buying an adapter, which they dubbed a dongle.

Yes, as it happens I also have an iphone, and in fairness I never expected a USB outlet. I agree completely this business of making equipment redundant very 2 years or so is a rort, and in the case of phones is also a terrible waste of indium, which we are burning through our reserves rapidly thanks to the ridiculous replacement of phones. Not that I replace phones very often (I have ever only owned three.)

Apple announced Thursday that it would expand its iPhone maintenance programs to include selling “the same genuine parts, tools, training, repair manuals and diagnostics” to independent repair shops for the most common out-of-warranty fixes.
Previously, a store needed to be part of the network of service providers officially authorized by Apple to purchase authentic materials from the company or to repair iPhones without voiding the devices’ warranties.

Android; they follow two diferent marketing strategies targeting different audiences but despite that Android is and will win more and more market share and consequent revenue.
Both are basically just a nicely skinned front end for linux with "walled garden" features. china already noticed this and has their own linux based phone os. Fort George Meade will complain mightily.


I had a windows phone. I liked it and it was the advent of Cortana and following the surgeries in both arms in 2012. Sadly, the apps were lacking and when the compatability of using the apps I could find became less useful, as they weren't updated often enough, I gave it up to go to Samsung android. I was so used to using computers, I found it much easier to manipulate the Windows phone (my 1st smart phone) into doing what I wanted. I suspect smart phones were simply less smart, too.

Android has more apps downloaded, but IOS has more in-app purchases.
No idea who will win globally. In the USA, I suspect whatever is most convenient for the majority of the population will win out.


Sound remarks. We need to invite apple's customer care division to this discussion :)

My iphone makes a noise and vibrates when a message comes in, and if I haven't answered, it leaves a sign on the screen. As for the numbers, it offers more while taking up less screen space.
I am puzzled, though, about the alarm clock reference. Why do you want to look to see how long it will be before the alarm goes off? You have to be awake to do that, in which case you will know what the time is so you will know by simple subtraction..

Ian, my iPhone doesn't vibrate for missed messages or calls. Tell me how to make it do that. I've researched it and haven't found a way. As for the keyboard, I want numbers at the top so that I don't have to go back and forth from letters to numbers. That's logical and time-saving. As for the alarm, if the iPhone is so user-friendly, then it should tell me the number of hours until the alarm goes off instead of making me subtract. I paid a lot for this phone, and I expect to have the subtraction done for me, as the Android did. Why is it making me use my brain? ;-) My brain is busy keeping me alive and solvent.


Which one do you fancy more?