runawayprisoner
Platinum Member
- Apr 2, 2008
- 2,496
- 0
- 76
Android literally sucks on tablets. It's slow, stuttery, and hangs up quite often. When it does work, you are left constantly hunting for performance tweaks and other things.
Sincerely, the amount of time I spend to get an Android tablet working as it should far exceeds the time it take for me to convert everything else I own to an iOS-friendly environment. About the only thing I miss after going back to iOS was the ability to play Flash on very specific websites, but I decided my MacBook was much better suited for such a task anyways.
If you want to, go give the Transformer Prime a whirl. I did, and it is probably by far the best Android tablet I have played with. But I was missing out on a lot of productivity apps, and the overall smoother experience of iOS, so it never grew on me.
Specifically, I missed the following:
1) Pages. Probably the best way to create a PDF document on a mobile device that I know of. It has limitations, but it's far better than anything else I have used. QuickOffice feels like a patchjob in comparison. I'm anxiously awaiting LibreOffice app when it comes out.
2) Numbers + OminiGraphSketcher combo. It takes literally minutes to create a nice, professional, and accurate graphical representation of data. I need to show trends a lot, so the ability to graph from spreadsheet data is important. iOS offers this in the form of this combo of two apps, which I think are indispensible.
3) iBooks is probably by far the best mobile PDF document viewer that I have used. I use my MacBook to annotate my PDF when I need to, but when I actually need to read PDF, I think the iPad + iBooks would be my combo of choice. This was partially why I waited to get the iPad 3, rather than just make do with iPad 2.
4) Bento. It's my everything. I have my personal journal in there, I have my asset inventory in there, I have all of my expenses tracking in there, I have a database of my contacts, friends, family, and etc in there, it holds my own personalized wikipedia, and just about everything. I think it's easily the best database software I have ever used. Syncing with Mac is a bit spotty, but I can do a lot more with Bento on the iPad because it's more portable. I'm also looking at FileMaker to upgrade and do a few more things, but sincerely, I can't go a day without a database. This is the ultimate weapon in my arsenal.
Just those 4 are the main reasons why I'd stick with iOS. UI performance is another perk, but sincerely, the Android OS lacks so many things, and I'm not comfortable with shifting over just to gain a file explorer and Flash capability but lose access to my essential apps.
Sincerely, the amount of time I spend to get an Android tablet working as it should far exceeds the time it take for me to convert everything else I own to an iOS-friendly environment. About the only thing I miss after going back to iOS was the ability to play Flash on very specific websites, but I decided my MacBook was much better suited for such a task anyways.
If you want to, go give the Transformer Prime a whirl. I did, and it is probably by far the best Android tablet I have played with. But I was missing out on a lot of productivity apps, and the overall smoother experience of iOS, so it never grew on me.
Specifically, I missed the following:
1) Pages. Probably the best way to create a PDF document on a mobile device that I know of. It has limitations, but it's far better than anything else I have used. QuickOffice feels like a patchjob in comparison. I'm anxiously awaiting LibreOffice app when it comes out.
2) Numbers + OminiGraphSketcher combo. It takes literally minutes to create a nice, professional, and accurate graphical representation of data. I need to show trends a lot, so the ability to graph from spreadsheet data is important. iOS offers this in the form of this combo of two apps, which I think are indispensible.
3) iBooks is probably by far the best mobile PDF document viewer that I have used. I use my MacBook to annotate my PDF when I need to, but when I actually need to read PDF, I think the iPad + iBooks would be my combo of choice. This was partially why I waited to get the iPad 3, rather than just make do with iPad 2.
4) Bento. It's my everything. I have my personal journal in there, I have my asset inventory in there, I have all of my expenses tracking in there, I have a database of my contacts, friends, family, and etc in there, it holds my own personalized wikipedia, and just about everything. I think it's easily the best database software I have ever used. Syncing with Mac is a bit spotty, but I can do a lot more with Bento on the iPad because it's more portable. I'm also looking at FileMaker to upgrade and do a few more things, but sincerely, I can't go a day without a database. This is the ultimate weapon in my arsenal.
Just those 4 are the main reasons why I'd stick with iOS. UI performance is another perk, but sincerely, the Android OS lacks so many things, and I'm not comfortable with shifting over just to gain a file explorer and Flash capability but lose access to my essential apps.
