At this point Microsoft is holding Lumia back with Windows Phone. They desperately need to start moving at a break-neck pace to reach feature parity with iOS and Android and also to flesh out their app market.
I predict once the Nokia 5" 1080P quadcore phones are out next year we may start seeing some momentum in North America.
I'm totally happy with my Lumia 521, but I feel like all I would gain from a more expensive device would be a better camera and screen.
As opposed to CPU cores and RAM that sit idle for 99% of users?
I'd rather have a better screen and camera than faster silicon. It's much more applicable to the usage model.
It's extremely easy to bring any phone to its knees if you're trying to web browse and occasionally switch to messaging apps and twitter and facebook and back.
I'm a light user however, but I think that most people would fall more under "simple taskers" than "heavy multi taskers".
At this point Microsoft is holding Lumia back with Windows Phone. They desperately need to start moving at a break-neck pace to reach feature parity with iOS and Android and also to flesh out their app market.
I really don't think this matters. I hope that if Nokia decides to release phablets that they'll at least have a flagship level device in the 4.3-4.5" range. Even the L920 is a little large for me, but doable.I predict once the Nokia 5" 1080P quadcore phones are out next year we may start seeing some momentum in North America.
This. Microsoft needs to be just throwing huge wads of cash that direction. They need to show they're serious. Right now I just think they're poking along, perfectly OK with whatever is happening.
There's so much good about WP. But the few things that aren't good are some of the biggest issues.
I really don't think this matters. I hope that if Nokia decides to release phablets that they'll at least have a flagship level device in the 4.3-4.5" range. Even the L920 is a little large for me, but doable.
I suspect Nokia will continue offering 4.3-4.7" flagship devices alongside a supersized phablet 5" 1080P monster. They are fleshing their product line out quite nicely.
Nonsense. The most powerful smartphone on the market is still not even remotely close to being fast enough. Tons of websites run like garbage on modern smartphones due to their lack of resources. It's extremely easy to bring any phone to its knees if you're trying to web browse and occasionally switch to messaging apps and twitter and facebook and back.
This must be an Android thing. I highly doubt people on iOS are screaming for more performance because their iPhones feel like lagfests. Windows Phones are quite fast and run well considering their low hardware specs.
I think 5th.
Considering other OSes don't have multitasking that would make sense.
Nonsense. The most powerful smartphone on the market is still not even remotely close to being fast enough. Tons of websites run like garbage on modern smartphones due to their lack of resources. It's extremely easy to bring any phone to its knees if you're trying to web browse and occasionally switch to messaging apps and twitter and facebook and back.
I see the kind of lag you talk about frequently on my Galaxy Nexus, but I always thought that was because the phone is a piece of crap. However, I've used an iP5 with much more heavy multitasking than I ever did on my GN and never saw any appreciable lag.
Also, do you care to explain how iOS and WP8 don't multitask? The last time I saw the "Android is the only OS with true multitasking" argument was back when iOS actually had no multitasking and WP7 wasn't out yet.
The OSes with true multitasking was Palm and Symbian. I haven't used Palm that much but from the demo videos, that was true multitasking. Full blown multitasking.
Even Android you don't have a way to keep your apps open. Persistent apps like BBS and Launchers reload from time to time. It's really at the system's whim to kill it or not. And seriously, telling me to get a 2GB phone isn't really a solution to me. If you can't keep a launcher loaded in memory that runs on a 512mb or 256mb phone even, then how should 2Gb matter? (Let's not even talk about how I can demo my Nexus 4 redrawing right now).
I'm well versed in Symbian and back then you could open app after app after app. If you forgot to close out the app, it would sit in memory and remain in the background. On Android, there was the whole debacle about whether or not you need to exit an app, and it was determined--no. So how's that full blown multitasking anyway? The system determines when the app closes, not you.
Furthermore, Android, like iOS and WP use saved states extensively. There's multitasking APIs to run audio in the background, download, finish loading webpages, background pull, etc. but in the end apps like Angry Birds won't continue to run where your bird continues flying if you switch out. Youtube won't play in the background with sound only, etc.
The truth is mobile multitasking is truly limited, and while everyone loves to slam iOS for lacking in multitasking, Android is lacking itself too. Until its the same multitasking I get on my PC, it's NOT full blown multitasking. So people need to stop acting like Android uses more power and lags more because its true multitasking. By that logic my PC should be a slideshow.
BB10 does true multitasking. I've got a Z10 and quite like it. I'm going to upgrade to the A10 when it comes out.
It doesn't do as much (because of apps) as Android and iOS right now, but what it does, it does well.
The OSes with true multitasking was Palm and Symbian. I haven't used Palm that much but from the demo videos, that was true multitasking. Full blown multitasking.
Even Android you don't have a way to keep your apps open. Persistent apps like BBS and Launchers reload from time to time. It's really at the system's whim to kill it or not. And seriously, telling me to get a 2GB phone isn't really a solution to me. If you can't keep a launcher loaded in memory that runs on a 512mb or 256mb phone even, then how should 2Gb matter? (Let's not even talk about how I can demo my Nexus 4 redrawing right now).
I'm well versed in Symbian and back then you could open app after app after app. If you forgot to close out the app, it would sit in memory and remain in the background. On Android, there was the whole debacle about whether or not you need to exit an app, and it was determined--no. So how's that full blown multitasking anyway? The system determines when the app closes, not you.
Furthermore, Android, like iOS and WP use saved states extensively. There's multitasking APIs to run audio in the background, download, finish loading webpages, background pull, etc. but in the end apps like Angry Birds won't continue to run where your bird continues flying if you switch out. Youtube won't play in the background with sound only, etc.
The truth is mobile multitasking is truly limited, and while everyone loves to slam iOS for lacking in multitasking, Android is lacking itself too. Until its the same multitasking I get on my PC, it's NOT full blown multitasking. So people need to stop acting like Android uses more power and lags more because its true multitasking. By that logic my PC should be a slideshow.