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iPhone vs. Android Questions
I really want the new iPhone. I am tired of my Android phone resetting, poor battery life, etc.
What will I not get with the iPhone that I have with my Android? Is is true that I won't be able to put my Android photos on my iPhone? What about my contacts? |
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I have a lot, I think close to 1k on my 16g 4s. It is crazy to go through and delete 100 at a time
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NOOOOOOOO!! DROID!
I am a fan of the droid. Just bought a tablet as well. I never have problems with my phone.. Love it! |
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Pictures are a universal format, and can be used on either IOS or Android. Contacts can be maneuvered in many ways. Last I checked iTunes had a way to use your Google contacts for the iPhone.
So if those are your only questions, you should be good to move to iPhone. I am a Android fan, hate to see you go. Both phone are extremely powerful and both can do pretty much the same things at this point. There really isn't much loss of features between switching. |
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This should be fun :rolleyes:
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Dan, you can import all of your google contacts (assuming that is where all your current contacts are synced with) by setting up your gmail account on your iphone. You may have to set up the gmail as an exchange push account (there are instruction on the web) but it does work.
You should be able to take all of your pictures off of your phone currently by hooking it into a computer through the usb cable and pull them off as if it was a flash drive. |
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I would honestly wait for verizon to pick up the new jelly bean OS for the droid phones and compare the two. the new iphone 5 isnt really much different in terms of battery life and features from the previous models, the apple site says it has better battery life but some of their info on that just dosnt add up. However if you were to get an Iphone then the 5 is the way to go since they decided to change the charging port, and overall it seems like a nice phone, but to be honest the features of both OS are very similar so it will come down to what you like best. :2
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Should be simple to switch those 2 things.
Contacts, on google. Picture to comp to iphone.. Time consuming, thats all. Let us know what you like better when you get the apple |
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I have an iPhone 4 and a HTC Desire. The iPhone 4 is light years ahead of the Desire.
As far as picture transfer, you have to use a computer I believe. As far as GB usage, I have over 2500 pics, 2000 songs (Some audio books) and 4 movies on my 32G and still have about 9G left. |
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I don't think you are asking the right questions.
First, the iPhone is one device. Android runs on many (100s) of devices. Blaming poor battery life or any other problem you are having on Android is misguided. You may want to first look at your device. iOS vs Android is a comparison worth discussing. The iPhone 5 vs. Samsung Galaxy S3 is also a comparison worth discussing. Understanding what you want out of your device and how you use it is probably much more relevant to this conversation. |
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Just got a Samsung Galaxy S3. The thing is so unbelievably fast.
Of course, I couldn't help myself... I rooted it and installed a ROM within a day. But, this is one of the main reasons why I really like Android. I like to tinker. To each, their own.... |
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here's some popcorn, Jim. :po |
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Verizon - I switched from the Droid X2 to the iPhone 4. Contacts transferred fine. Could have done pictures, but I didn't want to wait(he said it would take a while).
The only thing that I can think of that I had with my Droid, that I don't with the iPhone is free GPS turn by turn directions app.....and maybe I could easily get that if I tried, I just haven't. |
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Don't know if Drop Box is available on the iphone, but that would be an easy way to trans photos.
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Right now I'm just pissed about not being able to keep my unlimited data plan by switching to the Iphone5. |
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[quote=aich75013;1716325]Really? I have been told by AT&T reps that changing phones doesn't affect your plan.[/QUOTEThats
That's odd it shouldn't change I have even added lines to my unlimited plan and it didnt change. |
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I just preordered the 5 and my unlimited plan was not changed.
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:tu |
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Back to the question by OP. As suggested, drop box should work, syncing pictures through itunes would work, and would involve a mass drop and upload from your android device to itunes. Here is a link to a way to sync contacts. |
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$299 promo price for upgrading and $299 in 2 years is less then having to pay $1500 in 2 years. Considering I usually break the phone in some fashion before the 2 years is up I'm a slave to their terms of the contract |
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I paid $175 for my Spectrum after I took the first one swimming with me. Still have unlimited data. |
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Go to a used phone store (or craigslist) and get a used phone for about $200 and keep the unlimited data. my wife's phone took a dive, and I bought her a used phone for cheap. No change to the contract.
I just can not get behind the whole "Apple is the end all be all of everything" craze. I've played around with the Iphone and I own a Droid X (old but still works great), and the ability to customize the android phones is a total deal maker for me. Apple controls everything. Plus I have purchased applications for the droid, and switching to the iphone would just mean that I would have to repurchase those applications. |
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(created on my iPhone 4S, until I get my already per-ordered iPhone 5. I know, I know, I'm an idiot) |
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http://www.forbes.com/sites/adrianki...-the-increase/ Perhaps if you're talking about a single model then you could make that argument. Otherwise it's simply untrue. The majority of people, 80% per that article, choose not to pay for the Apple name, or can't afford to. I remember Apple booming in the early home computing days too. Good product, nice interface, but proprietary and expensive. They refused to allow other hardward vendors to license their OS. Eventually that landed them where they are now in the computer OS market, a 4-8% share. That same thing could happen in the mobile market. I know :tf, but those who dont' learn from the past are doomed to repeat it. |
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It just seems tthe mobile market is a situation with a likelihood of following the same path as the PC market. The similarities are undeniable. Apple computers were IT. Graphical User Interface was born. Nobody had seen anything like it. They had some of the best applications, only written for Apple OS, like Adobe products. Apple had RISC based CPUs, far more efficient and faster than Intel's x86. They had SCSI bus controllers/HDs, much faster and more robust than IDE or Micro-Cannel. Apple even setup special discounts for schools to kids would get used to their GUI and want/buy one as they grew older. Yet Microsoft came along and licensed their OS, DOS and eventually Windows, to IBM and other hardware manufacturers. Soon, the IBM "clones" surpassed Apple's sales. Not long after they dwarfed Apple's numbers. The same principles are in place now. A very popular OS that is hardware specific is now being outsold by an OS that is licensed to dozens of hardware manufacturers who sell at a fraction of the price. Apple held so tight to their hardware, refusing to license the OS, that eventually they became a niche market in the PC world. |
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I kid I kid One reason an iPhone makes sense, for me at least, is that I have an Apple laptop and iPad. The syncing between devices and cloud storage is really nice. I know that there are also ways to do it for Android devices as well with dropbox and other ways that are offered, but I like having everything the same and the syncing all built in. |
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Plus I'm already used to the UI. |
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