openwheel
Platinum Member
- Apr 30, 2012
- 2,044
- 17
- 81
You really don't think OP is a "cultish feverish follower?" Really?
We have worse around here, and they smell like fruit. :ninja:
You really don't think OP is a "cultish feverish follower?" Really?
Hah, seriously though I wish people would just buy whatever they like and stop arguing like its the 2nd coming. Its a freaking phone and they all basically do the same thing.
YOU'RE JUST AN iDIOT! Or is that iIDIOT? Uhhh....iDUMMY. (Check the sarcasm meter, I am not trying to insult anyone, but parroting what some people say online.)
I've come to realize I don't want bells and whistles, I don't care about apps anymore beyond maps, yelp, open table...some basic ones that everyone has now. The things I *DO* care about are photos syncing, easy backups I need not worry about, and a music player/easy syncing of songs. Having a fingerprint unlock IS really nice. Having a phone watching my eye movement is not.
And battery life. It needs to last a day or more of ACTUAL use.
Apple only beats them in terms of profit, but going for profits only is not a good long-term strategy.
... thinner at the expense of battery life is dumb.
Does Samsung pay you by the number of posts or by number of replies? You're seriously damaging Samsung brand and reputation here. If that is your goal, you're doing a good job. I think I now hate Samsung because of you.
Isn't Samsung a massively larger company than Apple?
And truth be told, those apps are just as good on Android as iProducts, battery life just makes me crazy, thinner at the expense of battery life is dumb.
This is something that everyone should agree on.
I wish that the review sites would bang on about battery life a bit more in the way they bang on about far more trivial issues.
http://www.businessinsider.com/apple-battery-life-jony-ive-compelling-financial-times-2015-3In a new interview with Nick Foulkes from the Financial Times, Apple design chief Jony Ive has defended the company's ever-thinner designs, even when they come at the expense of increased battery life. He says the company will not introduce a larger battery because it would make the devices more "cumbersome" and less "compelling":
"When the issue of the frequent need to charge the iPhone is raised," Foulkes writes, "[Ive] answers that it's because it's so thin and light that we use it so much and therefore deplete the battery."