"The fact that the App Store integrated with social networks puts it ahead of all the competition."<p>I'm glad iOS is getting these features, but this article is just fanboy-ism.<p>The Play Store has a dedicated share button that lets you easily share to any social, communication, etc. App you have on your phone. I click it, I select Twitter, and I click "Tweet".<p>Other things like paging, feature graphics, have already been in Android for awhile as well.<p>I don't mind companies borrowing from each other, and obviously Android has still borrowed way more from Apple than Apple has borrowed from Android, but some of these bloggers don't even look at the other platforms before they write these circle jerks.
Hey, author of the post here.<p>It's nice to see some people picking up on the satirical nature of the post. I like to think I take an objective view of technologies and try not to stay loyal to any specific brand or company. For a while, I would have considered myself an Android fanboy - take that, those who took this seriously! - but have since moved to a more open view. I do think iOS 6 is important, and, the last part about me getting thinking about going for the next iPhone is actually true, but I am currently using Android and work with several Android developers so am closer to that platform right now - and yes, I understand intents pretty well -- just saying. It's needless to say I find it hilarious that some people were non-ironically calling me an Apple fanboy. I'm glad you had an opinion about the post, anyway.<p>tankbot: re Passbook: this may actually be the game changer.
"The fact that the App Store integrated with social networks puts it ahead of all the competition. But, not only does it put it ahead now, it puts it ahead indefinitely."<p>On Android I get the option to share an app from the app store via Facebook, Twitter, Dropbox, Google+, Gmail, text message, Bluetooth, Google Drive ....
I don't want to jump on this bandwagon of "fanboy!" chanting, but it does exasperate me a little some times how little-known Android's "intents" feature is. It is genuinely fantastic, and underused even by Android developers themselves- I never stop being frustrated that I can't make a shortcut directly to Instagram's camera screen.<p>iOS really has no equivalent, beyond these hard-coded intents for Facebook and Twitter. It's a real shame.
Did I miss something in this article? How is the app store being _slightly_ prettier "going to change everything?"<p>There weren't any real game changers in the iOS announcement but if I had to pick one it would be passbook.