Why I regret the day I purchased anything but an iPhone

I’ve been a huge supporter of Android over the past year. Ever since I purchased my Droid X, things have been okay. I’m checking my email, staying on top of social networks, and flinging Angry Birds around. But asking any more of my Android device is far too much, and that’s a big problem.
What am I doing with an Android device, you ask? I didn’t have a choice in the matter. AT&T’s service was practically non-existent where I lived, which is amazing considering AT&T’s bold claims of their impressive network. And in 2010, the possibility of the iPhone on Verizon was only a rumor. Owning an iPhone was a dream.
No worries, though: the Motorola Droid X, at that time, was recently released and was dubbed Verizon’s best smartphone ever by a bevy of tech journalists. I had my replacement!
At first, things were great. I was impressed by how easy it was to integrate all my Google services with Android. I was also impressed with the widgets, at least for the first few days. That deep, robotic “Droid” voice was also fun to hear. And, finally, did I mention those Angry Birds?
I shared my excitement on Facebook: “Who needs an iPhone? I have my Droid X. That’s all I’m going to need.”
The iOS experience
You remember how I said owning an iPhone was just a dream? I didn’t really believe that. I actually went ahead and purchased an iPhone a few months before my owned my Droid X, even though I was certain I wouldn’t have service. I walked out of the AT&T store with a 32 GB iPhone 3GS. I couldn’t have been happier. Not only was this my first iPhone, but it was also my first smartphone. (I had never really viewed a smartphone as an essential device up until that point.) The experience was completely new to me: the interface was incredibly fluid, the browser was snappy and rendered things beautifully (I had never seen a good working mobile browser until this point), and I was fascinated with Maps application — it’s almost like I had never used a GPS before. But there was one thing that stood out above the rest: the App Store. Every App that I installed on that iPhone I enjoyed. I had actually spent money on Apps even before I made it home from the AT&T store! Considering that I had just spent $300 of my hard earned cash on an iPhone, that was quite an achievement. Apple certainly knows how to get people to open their wallets.
The Android experience
The Droid branding really did sell me on the Droid X. I’m not sure, but there is something special about a phone that has the name “Droid,” has a kick-ass red eye as part of the branding, and can take a tiny piece of Star Wars history with it and cram it all together into a single package. It also helped that the phone was one of the largest available at that time: a 4.3-inch form factor. I immediately ordered one at the store and waited for the phone to arrive at my house (as the Droid X was selling very well and was hard to get a hold of). When it arrived, I was surprised with how big the phone actually was. It’s difficult to judge how a phone feels while strapped to a security contraption at a store. I was happy with it. It felt just right. Granted, it felt awkward in my pocket, especially while walking up steps, but the usability of the screen, particularly for my chunky fingers, was superb. The inclusion of Swype was also interesting to me. It felt like a much better system for entering text than the iPhone’s keyboard. Not to mention that it was just plain cool at the time.
Unforgettable comparisons
It’s almost unfortunate that I experienced an iOS device before Android. If I hadn’t, Android might be, at least in my mind, an incredible experience. It most certainly is a better experience compared to a few years before, when Windows Mobile and Blackberry were the only competition. I had an LG Chocolate — I had to return it for repairs three times, and I am typically very careful with my gadgets. But when you add Apple’s iOS into the mix, you quickly open your eyes and realize some things. For example, most people don’t care if X phone has more processing power than Y phone. They don’t care if X has twice the amount of RAM over Y. Most consumers won’t ever notice. I don’t think that I really care either. Consumers will, however, notice battery life. Apple has always done an astounding job with maximizing battery performance on their devices. The fact that an iPhone could go all day long without a single charge is remarkable. And when I hear that, I can’t help but cringe — I feel incredibly fortunate when my Droid X gets three hours of battery life with heavy usage.
iOS being a closed platform if often considered a negative thing where Android’s openness is considered a positive. Ironically you could say the exact same thing in reverse. Fragmentation was last year’s buzz word which Android fans brushed off as nonsense. But it is a real problem when you go to say a bar and you see there is a Buzztime trivia app on iOS and Android and it works on every single iPhone but only a handful of Android handsets. It also doesn’t help that Google’s app store isn’t very good.
It’s not surprising that Google is trying to introduce restrictions to future devices, aka closing some of it’s openness. Android fans mock iOS users as cult-of-Apple fans but the success of the iPhone has little to do with the Apple cult. Normal people have iPhones, probably most iPhone owners. Hardcore Android fans on the other hand are their own little cult. It’s not surprising that most of them are also huge Microsoft fans and they’re also war-mongering Protestant Fundies full of intense rage. That’s why I don’t care for Android, because of their own cult!
I’m not convinced you’ve ever actually used a Droid. Your problems were very vague, and nothing I’ve experienced myself. What crashed, exactly? What locked up? What amazing app, exactly, is your iPhone running which you can’t do on the Droid? You were suspiciously vague about everything. The only concrete thing you mentioned was battery life, which you could just as easily have found out about by reading Amazon reviews.
I’m all for a good article bashing A and promoting B, but your journalism on this is so vague as to be completely useless.
Incidentally, I think you’ll find 3rd party support for Droid smashing the iPhone now.
Available development platforms for iPhone: OS X
Available development platforms for Droid: OS X, Windows, Linux.
Adding those last two allows them to include the 90% of the world’s developers that Apple excludes with their OS X restriction!
“Adding those last two allows them to include the 90% of the world’s developers that Apple excludes with their OS X restriction!”
Restricting dev to OS X is definitely lame, but it isn’t holding back devs from making iOS apps. This sentence makes it sound like iOS only has 1/10 of potential developers. Truthfully if a developer is convinced that they have a concept which could make money, they’ll just go buy a mac and develop it. There are zero amazingly talented devs just sitting there shunning iOS cause they don’t have a Mac. The entry price is meaningless if you can make thousands of dollars.
iPhone really is the best – the droids have been known to send texts to the wrong people and the app marketplace feels like a flea market compared to apples AppStore.
Sounds like a matter of personal opinion to me and the fact that you like to be told what you can and cannot do with your phone. I get more than 3 hours battery life; so far that is the only complaint I have heard from most Iphone users. I can customize my Droid X and use any apps from any developers I want you won’t be able to do that unless you jailbreak your phone which you obviously don’t know how to do. It’s like comparing apples to oranges everybody has thier os. You don’t sound like you know how to use a smat phone your like Hosea from top chef who worked at a seafood restaurant who can’t cook fish