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Ask HN: iPhone users, what's stopping you from switching to Android?

13 pointsby SlightGeniusabout 1 year ago

11 comments

ChemicalByteabout 1 year ago
As an iPhone user, the seamless integration, user-friendly interface, and quality hardware/software have kept me loyal. Additionally, investment in iOS-specific apps and accessories makes switching to Android challenging. While Android offers customization and device variety, Apple's ecosystem and overall experience are compelling reasons to stay.
youngtaffabout 1 year ago
Nothing’s stopping me but…<p>I’d rather buy a phone from a company where the phone is the product and not one where the OS is from an advertising company (Yes I know Apple are an advertiser too)<p>I originally used Android but got fed up with the lack of updates. I know Google have fixed this somewhat but they have a history of abandoning things
mattlabout 1 year ago
So many things:<p>* Device support<p>* OS security<p>* Compatibility with existing Apple devices (Mac, etc)<p>* Quality of apps<p>* Ease of use<p>I&#x27;ll break these down, but before I do... I used to be an Android user from basically day one (Android Dev Phone), I switched away after the Pixel and never looked back.<p>* Device support<p>What Android phone do I buy? Will it be filled with crap I can&#x27;t remove when I buy it? If I buy a phone, and I have an issue with it where can I go and get a replacement quickly? How long will my phone receive updates?<p>I feel like Android devices are a choice of Samsung Galaxy S-series phones or Google Pixel phones. Samsung ones have the crapware, Google ones don&#x27;t get updates for very long. Samsung not much longer it seems.<p>* OS Security<p>I don&#x27;t trust that an Android phone isn&#x27;t phoning home all the time. Also, updates don&#x27;t last very long on the OS so after a few years my phone is vulnerable.<p>* Compatibility with other Apple devices<p>I like the seamless nature of the Apple ecosystem. My photos&#x2F;apps&#x2F;messages&#x2F;files are on all my devices. Android would break that.<p>* Quality of apps<p>I feel like the quality of apps on the iPhone is higher and that cross platform apps on the iPhone tend to be worse.<p>* Ease of use<p>I think Android finally got rid of the extra buttons for back and menu on every device but whenever (rarely) I use an Android device for something I don&#x27;t find it easy to use. This has gotten worse, IMO. Earlier Android devices made more sense to me.
meepmorpabout 1 year ago
I think the iPhone is better, both hardware and software. I acknowledge that my experience with android is mostly limited to on playing with devices in store, the emulator as part of debugging something, and occasionally using a friend&#x27;s phone.<p>I also don&#x27;t want anything to do with google.
JojoFatsaniabout 1 year ago
AirPods swapping between devices is incredibly seamless, way better than standard Bluetooth. AirPlay sharing as well. And the Apple Watch is probably 10 years ahead of any competition.
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xenospnabout 1 year ago
- Aesthetics: Android phones are severely lacking in build quality and accessory design<p>- Software quality: last time I opened the Play store, it felt like I needed to use protection<p>- Lack of iMessage is a big one<p>- No long term support and no Apple Store equivalent where I can easily go if something is broken or missing.<p>- I straight up don’t like Google
fsfloverabout 1 year ago
Not using any of those, but here is a plausible reason: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=26639261">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=26639261</a>
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fragmedeabout 1 year ago
singularly, iMessage and the associated features like FaceTime and location sharing. They work on Android, but network effects of everyone else I know using iMessage means it&#x27;s just more seamless. I don&#x27;t have to get other people to install some app just to talk to me.
JumpinJack_Cashabout 1 year ago
It&#x27;s the networking effect of the apps and the lack of Whatsapp in the US.
62728494929about 1 year ago
For me personally it&#x27;s privacy. I know that Apple is no angle either, but a simple GDPR data request, show how limited data they have compared to Google. Besides that, they offer me end-to-end encryption across their cloud sync besides contacts, calendar or email (which I have on via Carddav&#x2F;Caldav on Synology anyways - and protonmail).<p>They also offer differential privacy or are using random identifiers in most of their services. I know they&#x27;re a for profit company, but for now, I really like what they&#x27;re doing on the privacy front.<p>Besides that, I like Shortcuts. While Tasker might be more powerfull, it&#x27;s losing features for every generation of Android because Google is locking Android down. Shortcuts is relatively stable, has good OS integration and third party integration.
jrflowersabout 1 year ago
Preference