Not that I want to get into this... but I will now. Doesn't this kind of go against your point? Since the built in google maps app is pretty lacking (it very much is) it's a very good thing that we have so many different alternatives. I agree that too many alternatives without much quality control can be a bad thing, but that's what the reviews are for. I'd much rather have too many apps to choose from and have to scroll a little further to find the best one, rather than be stuck with 3 choices that may all suck.
I'm entitled to what I think, just as you think BB OS6 is just as good. You throw the fanboy flag out like candy when you yourself are the most biased of em.
I have admitted BB does some things better in other threads, I have never seen you do the same for other platforms. Owning other devices means jackshit if you don't like them.
OK, but then consider that BB6 was last October and 6.1 is just around the corner with a large slew of improvements, so you need to look forward, not backward.
Again, with apps I have to disagree. I have 50+ apps on my device, an number that is made up of GPS fitness apps, games (OpenGL, too), utilities, OS hacks, mapping and navigation, novelty, etc. I use many of these on a daily basis. The apps are not business centric in the main, except for WorldMate, but I travel the world on business and therfore that is pretty awesome; it even captures the emails from my travel booking service and updates the app with my full itinerary.
I pretty much have every base covered. The sheer total number of apps is, IMHO, worthless. I've discussed it before, but having 200,000 apps is useless if you only really use seven of them on a regular basis. This was borne out recently with the top ten apps for iOS listed recently, with the usual suspects like Facebook and Angry Birds topping the charts. OK, so no angry birds on BlackBerry...or IS THERE!
I can understand how having 200k apps is pointless if you only use a handful, but what non iOS users don't understand is that those handful of apps SUCK.
I think the apps on other platforms do the job, but the alternative app on iOS is several times better.
I'd say common tasks will have apps for them, like viewing office files, navigation, etc. However, with a wider choice (as noted by gsaldivar notes), iOS and Android are more likely to have an app that fits your style of usage. So BB may have 3 apps that read/edit MS Office files, iOS and Android may have 10. You may find that all 3 apps on BB just doesn't feel right to you but you are more likely to find one on iOS or Android. That's because no two persons work the same way and even though I might be working in Excel, the tasks I need to perform are different from what another person is doing. Not only that but the increased competition means that you must work harder to differentiate your app to pull sales in. That's one case where a wider selection of apps is a positive.
The other is niche apps. Being a bilingual person, I have a need for an English/Chinese dictionary among other tools. There are a couple of niche apps that I use on iOS that I haven't seen on Android and definitely know I won't find on BB.
No. That's not always the case. The official Office app for WP7 looks a hell of a lot better than anything I've seen on iOS and Android. A larger selection of apps makes it more likely you'll find a quality app but it doesn't guarantee it. And as noted in this thread, from a features standpoint, Google Maps on Android is heads and tails better than the iOS version.
Orly?
I don't see how that says phone A does so and so better than phone B. I'm willing to admit that Android does multitasking better, BB does email better, etc.
Right, let's put this to bed first; Gladsivar said THREE APPS. This is NOT THE CASE.
Eh...those apps listed are quite standard even if learning Chinese is a niche area. Believe it or not learning Chinese is quite big in the business world now. It used to be that learning Spanish was almost a given if you were going into business since it was the second most spoken language. Now since so many companies are doing business in China or Taiwan, Chinese is actually a language many learn.Right, that out of the way, I did a quick search on App World for Chinese<>English apps:
1) Collins Mandarin Chinese Dictionary
2) Learn Mandarin Chinese Vocab
3) i-Phrase Chinese
4) HNHSoft Talking Chinese Lesson 1
5) HNHSoft Talking Chinese Lesson 2
6) HNHSoft Talking Chinese Lesson 3
7) HNHSoft Talking Chinese Lesson 4
8) HNHSoft Talking Chinese Lesson 5
9) HNHSoft Talking Chinese Lesson 6
10) HNHSoft English Chinese Talking Dictionary
11) Learn Cantonese Chinese Vocab
12) Franklin English-Chinese Visual Dictionary
So, Twelve apps for your niche, and this is on a Storm 2 that doesn't get access to all apps, and by the likes of Franklin and Collins. Again, the idea that the BlackBerry app eco system is poor is a perception, not a reality.
EDIT: OK, so I did a search via the webstore and there are 349 Chinese apps.
See for yourself:
http://appworld.blackberry.com/webst...hinese?lang=en
OK, I'm bored with you making up new reasons why it sucks.
Why are the stats usually on an OS basis? What about per handset, or per firm?