- Feb 19, 2001
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your definition of an upgrade is if your apps aren't backwards compatible anymore? LOLThe same could be said of any phone, but Yeah, iPhone and IOS are really super stale. Only the hardcore apple fanatics will say it's a major improvement. How can it be a major upgrade if there is no exclusive iphone 5 only apps? pretty much all ios apps will run across all of there devices so why even make a super iphone if it will still run the same shit as the 3gs?
See the thing is you can use a 2009 phone like the 3GS and still experience iOS 6 no problem and run plenty of apps. Go try using your Motorola Droid. Hack it to run ICS or JB. It'll break down. Even Gingerbread causes maps to run out of memory on a daily basis if you don't reboot. I know. I've been there. Even with the latest CM7 tweak that came out a month ago or so in attempts to free up 10 MB here 10MB there, it's like a lagfest.
The fact is there are plenty of apps out there that do take advantage of the iPhone 5 or iPad 4 hardware. Real racing for example. If you run real racing on an older phone like the 3GS you won't get that many graphical features.
You should be happy that 3GS users can still run apps. Just because on the Android side you see fragmentation and broken apps, and hardware that gets outdated in months and gets left behind for upgrades doesn't mean that's the model Apple needs to follow.
Furthermore, I brought my 2004 Dell laptop back to life with a new eBay battery. It does a great job surfing the web. I can watch flash videos up to 480p and do word processing with Office 2010 no problem and read forums, check email. Does that mean my 2008 MacBook Pro isn't an upgrade? Or my i7 in my desktop?
The fact is the iPhone 5 IS an upgrade. You just don't want to admit it. Even comparing photos from iPhone 4 to iPhone 5 is a huge difference. The camera has come a long way. I know you guys don't want to admit it on the Android side but the camera doesn't even come close. That same 8MP on my SGS2 doesn't hold a candle to the iPhone 5. The minimum focus distance is so much better, and the resulting bokeh looks far better. Not to mention indoors performance (not low light or anything, but indoors where my S95 would shine), where the iPhone produces low noise and sharp photos.
Honestly in many ways you could argue that Android products have stagnated too if we're using your logic. The Nexus' camera isn't better than 2011 devices.
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