nerp
Diamond Member
- Dec 31, 2005
- 9,865
- 105
- 106
You overstate how difficult Android phones are to use. They are basically appliances too, just more computer-like appliances. You don't have to root them or hack them. That is optional.
Honestly I spend LESS time screwing around on Android because I can directly do things I want to do. For example:
I want a mkv file on my phone? On iOS that means finding a player that is only sold for that platform, and getting the file on the device via Dropbox or some trick unique to the media app I bought, which often requires a PC in the middle. With Android I open the file manager and copy it off the server like I would do on a PC, and then when its done I play the file in Kodi like I do on a PC. It's easier and I can do it all on the phone.
Or let's say I want a custom ringtone of some video game sound effect. On an iPhone, even with a ringtone app to cut the steps, you HAVE TO go through iTunes and a computer. With my Android phone I open my ringtone app, search for the wav file I downloaded, edit it to be ringtone length, and then set it as a ringtone IN THE APP. Much easier and all done on the phone.
I could go on, for example using the same USB drive my PC uses is real nice. Point being assuming iOS is easier for all tasks in 2016 is folly. It is only easier to do what Apple pre-determined you can do, everything else is jumping through hoops.
See, all that stuff is the kind of thing I describe as no longer being of interest to me. I just use a PC or my home theater system to watch a movie. I can't imagine ever wanting to change a ringtone or put it as a custom ringtone for that matter. I get that Android gives you more options to customize and such but my original point was that I don't even have the desire to do that in the first place. I can't remember the last time I connected a phone to my computer. My car has an SD card slot and I filled a 128GB card with plenty of music. I listen to podcasts on my phone with bluetooth. Aside from that, I don't really have much need to do much else with it.
Some of this might be due to the fact I also have a Surface tablet, a bunch of Windows and Mac laptops and desktops. . . if I need to do something, there's always a device better for the task than a phone. And if I only have my phone, well, RDP to the VPN solves that in a jiffy.
If I had just a desktop and a phone or a laptop and a phone, I get it...An Android would be easier for stuff. But I have a home office, work from home and have a lot of tools for everything, so my phone really is just for email, twitter, FB, phone calls and messaging.