Why iphone overrated
Wallpaper apps not allowed. No file explorer, Dropbox and so on don't really work with iPhones etc, because they don't have access to central document folder. IPhone too expensive. You have limited personalization. Cant even move apps on your home screen where you want em.
They all have to be in a row. You must download iTunes for your computer to transfer things. I bought a non apple charger and after the warming that it wasnt an official apple product it just stopped working.
Its overpriced garbage. Its like a starter edition smartphone. Android blows Iphones out of the water and it isn't even close. I got my iphone for free and thank god because I would have serious buyers remorse.
It sucks ass. So far there are a few things that bug me 1. The app store search suck you put in the name of the app and gives you results for totally different apps? I'm having better luck using Google to search for them then clicking the link to the app store. The lack of not being able to put the apps where you want too. But that because I'm used to the windows os.
Again with the apps I can't say that there are any better that the other platforms. For some I have on other devices there are better than the apple ones. Just a little bit disappointed with all the hype apple seem to have. The price is relative, because shrewd shoppers can always find discounts and unshrewd shoppers like me, for instance tend to believe the earnest sales clerk and wind up adding unnecessary service options, which pad the bill.
Then there is the idea that an iPhone is somehow trendier than the Android. To paraphrase the old Groucho Marx line: I would never want to belong to any club that would have someone like me for a member.
When it comes to Apple, a lot of haters would want to flip the script and avoid any club that has Apple in it. Apple is the New York Yankees of American business. People either love or hate the company, and there is no neutral ground.
Tech website Phandroid recently compiled many of these features which are a part of iOS 10, Apple latest software release that will adorn the iPhone 7. From lock-screen UI to something as simple as clearing all notifications; from 'raise to wake' to the opening up of Siri to developers Google Now had long been open for years ; from a photo app with facial recognition to a better 'phone' app; from handy features like traffic information in Apple Maps which has long been a part of Google Maps to uninstalling stock apps; from split view, to collaboration features in notes, iOS has shown that it is really in love with Android.
It's not necessarily a bad thing. Give and take among competition results in a better product for customers. But the way Android has regularly outperformed iOS in terms of user friendliness, better intuitiveness and is more tailored to individual needs point to a lacunae in Apple's strategy which it has only now begun to correct by placing stress on smarter, rather than gimmicky features.
But by far the biggest problem with iPhone is that Apple's entire flagship line has stagnated. Under Tim Cook, Apple has become a more profitable company but there have been no real game-changing innovations of the kind Jobs regularly introduced. With all its warts and works, iPhone 7 at best is a solid but unimpressive product that offers only incremental updates to its earlier version and largely plays catch-up with the competition.
Aside from all the glossy claims that were pushed down our throats yesterday, only one feature will really matter to users — better battery life. The iPhone 7Plus dual cam, while a handy addition, is nowhere near a novel innovation.
HTC had rolled it out with its flagship M8 please check the date of launch. While the M8 dual cam was nowhere near the iPhone 7 Plus in terms of features, the idea was already in place. Which essentially means that Apple took an existing idea and improved on it, as it has consistently done throughout. There's also no reason to think that the dual camera will be able to deliver DSLR level image quality, as Apple's Phil Schiller suggested on stage.
Shun digital zoom like the bubonic plague and stick to the zooms provided by the cameras. With iPhone 7, Apple bid goodbye to the ubiquitous 3. That's a steep price for stuff that could be easily misplaced. But the biggest problem with Apple's shift from 3. As Vox points out : "The downsides are obvious: Almost everyone has headphones, speakers, and other gadgets based on the ubiquitous 3. Ringing Bells is set to official unveil the Freedom smartphone, delivering on its commitment of launching the cheapest smartphone in India.
Apple intentionally slows down iPhones as they get older. There is some good reason for Apple to do this.
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