alkemyst
No Lifer
- Feb 13, 2001
- 83,769
- 19
- 81
Sorry but sales figures do not support your theory.
It may be a personal opinion of yours but its not the consensus.
People chose the better tablet with their wallet.
People choose cheap and free.
Sorry but sales figures do not support your theory.
It may be a personal opinion of yours but its not the consensus.
People chose the better tablet with their wallet.
I hope Apple stops ripping us off on the storage upgrades or at least kills the 16GB model and starts the 32GB model at $330 (stop laughing, I know it won't happen, just saying.)
That would go a long way to getting rid of the worst of my complaints about their pricing. The base memory is always laughably small and then they gouge you for the upgrades on top of already premium price. I agree that they'll never do though. Its kinda like buying a german car. There is the base price and then the real price.
People chose the more heavily marketed tablet with their wallet.
The same could be said for Google last year releasing the Nexus 4 and Nexus 7 with 8 GB as the starting point. It's ridiculously low for anything. I can understand if you are the most basic user that doesn't need it, but the cost of memory has gone down drastically.
the main purpose of a tablet is to open up a web browser and read your favorite website.
the main purpose of a tablet is to open up a web browser and read your favorite website. For that, without question, the ipad is significantly better than android tablets.
According to who? If that was the case we wouldn't have a gazillion apps that all do the same thing: bypass the web browser and giving you a more mobile device optimized experience.
For you. I for one hate safari in all iterations. And with android I have the option of using several browsers. not what the gestapo tells me to use.
All of the 3rd party apps behave similarly to safari for things like pinch to zoom, scroll acceleration, and responsiveness. this is due to the fundamental engineering done in iOS.
the main purpose of a tablet is to open up a web browser and read your favorite website.
But they don't behave like websites, and that's why people pushed for an actual app store after the first iPhone came out. If the web browser was the be all end all function of tablets, they wouldn't need app stores.
But, in spite of the improvements, Munn believes the Android user interface "will never be completely smooth because of the design constraints" that limit UI rendering to the main thread of an app with normal priority.
"Even with a Galaxy Nexus, or the quad-core EeePad Transformer Prime, there is no way to guarantee a smooth frame rate if these two design constraints remain true," he said. "Its telling that it takes the power of a Galaxy Nexus to approach the smoothness of a three year old iPhone."
According to Munn, the reason behind the design change is that the original Android prototype didn't have a touchscreen, as it was meant to be a BlackBerry competitor. As such, Android's architecture is meant to support a keyboard and trackball. Munn further claimed that after the original iPhone arrived in 2007, Google rushed to complete Android, but "it was too late to rewrite the UI framework."
the apps I believe use the same rendering engine across the board.
anyways, I also use the read it later "pocket" app and iOS is again much better for pocket than android.
No grandpa.
And safari is probably the worst browser out there right now.
Chrome is silky smooth on my new Nexus 7, so is Safari on iOS. IE is also fantastic on my fiance's Nokia 928.
I have to give the nod to Chrome for the integration and overall ease to use.
IMHO, until it is opened up to USB (likely, never!), the iPad is only an entertainment device. An Android tablet is capable of real work involving passing material between devices.
The same could be said for Google last year releasing the Nexus 4 and Nexus 7 with 8 GB as the starting point. It's ridiculously low for anything. I can understand if you are the most basic user that doesn't need it, but the cost of memory has gone down drastically.
I'm glad Google saw the light at is selling them with 16 GB now. I just hope that only continues to trickle to the next Nexus phone, and then the following year, just bump the space up to 32 as a starter.
I loved having the Galaxy Nexus on VZW with 32 GB of space. It was fantastic not having to worry about storage (don't say anything those with µSD slots).
It is kind of astounding how difficult getting stuff off of and on to my ipod touch is unless its exactly the stuff Apple thinks is what I need and unless I do it exactly the way they think I need to do it.
