I once mentioned something I thought everyone who was familiar with ebook apps on iOS would know to someone in a thread. It was that Stanza (my favorite ebook app) is owned by Amazon. A reader disputed this and said that Stanza was owned and developed by Lexcycle. Which was true. Except that a few months prior to that discussion Amazon had purchased Lexcycle. I merely pointed out that the other person might have missed it in the news blurbs and pointed out a post by Lexcycle on their own web site which mentioned that they had been bought out by Amazon. Contrast this with what you did by using words like "In case you're too lazy to check it out" or "Please do some reading, or learn more English if that's too hard to understand." And these are direct quotes of yours that I'm posting. I'm not going to dig through every single wording in your post but sprinkling in comments like those gives your message a condescending tone.
Those quotes were taken from my responses to DivideByZero, not towards you, sir. Where did I respond to you with those quotes??
Funny you should mention digging up information. You refuse to acknowledge the evidence I've presented showing that you were in fact incorrect. My statement that iOS for tablets is not a good enough multitasking OS. That's not to say it's not adequate, it just means Honeycomb by nature is currently the more flexible and powerful OS. Considering that you champion iOS's multitasking when I've shown that it i unreliable. The OS decides whether your app gets to continue or not. Not you. Not the app developer. The OS. I've pointed out this fact in at least two posts but you refuse to acknowledge it.
I have pointed this out over and over again that the kernel will grant the request most of the time even if it can deny it, but you just keep insisting that it'll deny the request. I am adding to your view. I am not dismissing it.
I just don't want to keep this up knowing you'd just keep imposing your view on it instead.
Your opinion is out of the box Xoom can't do as much as iOS. All of those pretty featured apps that was showcased with iPad 2 aren't "out of the box" features. If we get into downloading apps that allow more utility out of the tablet, iOS has Android beat. No question but outside of niche and specialized apps, Android will do everything iOS can. I'd say 95% of what everyone would use an iPad for can be done on Android.
95% is your opinion. I'm certain the millions of iPad users out there disagree.
For instance:
There is no way to access Netflix on Honeycomb.
Flash is not there, and there is no app, so no way to access Hulu as well.
And since Flash is not there, you can't view videos on Engadget, on any tech blog, or not on New York Times, Wall Street Journal, etc....
I think I'm done with responding to you because of the tone of your message as well as the fact that you refuse to acknowledge the rebuttals that I've presented. This is just going to go back and forth with no end in sight. I've said what I wanted and I don't have much more to add to it. I like my iPhone. It's my device of choice. It has apps that I need/want that are not available on other mobile platforms. But I'm not blinded that I can't see the pros and cons of iOS or of competing mobile OS's.
This is your tone that you're setting here. Not only are you reading my responses to other people and assuming them to be to you, you are dismissing my points and then saying that I'm dismissing your points whereas I'm merely adding to yours. I mean no disrespect, but crying about someone else's tone in a discussion doesn't help support your side, and it only shows that you only want to humiliate the other side instead. I hope that is not your intention.
Also again, stating what you own isn't relevant, and it only shows that you only know one thing for sure. Would it be relevant if I stated that my main phone is a Samsung Captivate, and that I have used Android for roughly 2 years? Or that I don't have any iOS device in possession? Of course not.