both can be customized greatly, Android more-so, but you can still do plenty of altering to iOS if you jailbreak.
you can root/customize Android and iOS to whatever degree you wish. but the difference is that people feel the need to root their phones to simply to rid themselves of carrier installed bloatware/spyware, which is a huge problem on most android phones offered in the US. iOS doesn't have this problem since the ecosystem is locked down.
Stocks? Gamecenter? Newstand?
You can at least hide pre-installed bloat apps on a typical Android phone (or get a Nexus and not worry about it). I'm assuming with a jailbreak you can remove those apps off of an iPhone.
Be different, go Win7.
If you hack your iPhone you can change around the UI a little bit.
Link up a ~4.5" 720p SAMOLED iPhone after a jailbreak with a 32GB SD card installed please.
If you hack your iPhone you can change around the UI a little bit. That is what an iPhone user considers choice. If that is what you consider choice, then an iPhone is probably good for you.
both can be customized greatly, Android more-so, but you can still do plenty of altering to iOS if you jailbreak.
Link up a ~4.5" 720p SAMOLED iPhone after a jailbreak with a 32GB SD card installed please.
If you hack your iPhone you can change around the UI a little bit. That is what an iPhone user considers choice. If that is what you consider choice, then an iPhone is probably good for you.
Blackberry is on the way out; their customers have been leaving in droves. RIM finally replaced their two co-CEOs with one new guy, but I'm not too hopeful that he'll be able to turn that company around. If nothing else, their product reputation is tarnished in the minds of many consumers.In any case, I don't think it's fair to say "iOS". There's also Blackberry OS (if you want to look at that), WebOS (bit dead, but open source plans are in motion, or so they say), Windows Phone 7 (solid choice), and then MeeGo (gives a different taste), which is currently on only one handset. But just to say, iOS is not the only choice there is.
[...] personally, I wouldn't go iOS if I'm still on Windows, and if I hate iTunes
Great post. The only comment I'd add is that DRM'd iTunes music can be upgraded to DRM-free 256Kbps AAC via iTunes Plus ($0.30 per song or 30% per album) or a 1 year subscription to iTunes Match. You get to keep the music when the subscription ends, so the iTunes Match method is sometimes cheaper.The biggest reason to choose one over the other is if you already have some investment in either Google or Apple. [...] and [if you] already have a lot of music (particularly DRM'd music) on iTunes, then that's a pretty good reason to go iOS.