- PROS
- External Design is nice, it feels comfortable in my hand
- CONS
- Glass exterier seems like an accident waiting to happen
- No removable battery
- No removable memory (i.e. MicroSD card)
- PROS
- External Design is nice, it feels comfortable in my hand
- Theft protection out of the box
- CONS
- Glass exterier seems like an accident waiting to happen
- No removable battery
- No removable memory
- PROS
- External Design is nice, it feels comfortable in my hand
- Theft protection out of the box
- Keyboard has nice feel and autocorrect
- CONS
- Glass exterier seems like an accident waiting to happen
- No removable battery
- No removable memory
- Keyboard requires accessing secondary menu too much
Being the techie I am,
the first place I go when I get a new phone is to the settings menu. On my
Droid I do that by hitting the menu button and selecting settings, but the only
button on the iPhone is the home button. This was definitely frustrating, and
kept throwing me off. Some settings can be accessed by scrolling up from the bottom, but any other settings get annoying fast. While we're at it, I’m really starting to miss my
widgets. I have my Droid set up with widgets and shortcuts that let me access
most of what I need extremely easily and without spending too much time, but
the Apple home screen only lists the apps. Now, the way that they display the apps is a lot nicer than the Android app drawer. I find the dynamic icons extremely helpful, it's really nice knowing how many emails, etc. I have without opening the app, and it seems to work more smoothly than any 3rd party widgets I've seen for Android. Scrolling through the home screens is also a lot smoother than on my Droid Incredible, which I have no doubt is because of the uniformity of the icons. There's one thing that still troubles me though. For a phone which is supposed to be user-friendly and intuitive, how is there no option to organize the apps alphabetically? I get how "cool" it is to sort them by folders, etc. but you'd think there would at least be an option to sort them automatically.
PROS
CONS
- External Design is nice, it feels comfortable in my hand
- Theft protection out of the box
- Keyboard has nice feel and autocorrect
- Dynamic app icons
- Smooth scrolling
- Bottom-up quick-settings
- Glass exterier seems like an accident waiting to happen
- No removable battery
- No removable memory
- Keyboard requires accessing secondary menu too much
- No easy way to access settings
- No widgets
- No auto-sort of apps
So I didn't even get to the settings menu this time, we'll keep that on tap for a different post. What did you think about this first look? Is there a feature I missed? Thanks for reading!
I'd comment about how some of the things you point out which iOS does which Android doesn't do are in fact done by Android, but I get the feeling that that may contradict the point of this project (experiment?)
ReplyDeleteNot at all! My Android experience is ICS, so I'd like to hear anything about the newer versions. (This also applies to newer iPhones as well.)
DeleteUh, these are apps. SwiftKey keyboard is the best and Nova Launcher unread does app badges like a pro. Also, with Nova Launcher you can install some uniform and pretty icons.
ReplyDeleteFor home launcher I'd recommend Google Now Launcher.
ReplyDeleteWith regards to the autocorrect, I don't like Google's keyboard, which is why I use Swype.
There are apps for notification count, although since custom roms have it built it, I don't use them.
With regards to smoothness in general, Android worked on that with project butter in jb