FourFourSeven wrote:Bah. I never liked iPhones, or smartphones for that matter. For the same price of one, I could buy a decent laptop with comparatively superior specs.
Mullet Death wrote:FourFourSeven wrote:Bah. I never liked iPhones, or smartphones for that matter. For the same price of one, I could buy a decent laptop with comparatively superior specs.
The problem with this reasoning is that even the most compact laptop doesn't fit im your pocket.
As for me, I have no reason to replace my current Android.
FourFourSeven wrote:Mullet Death wrote:FourFourSeven wrote:Bah. I never liked iPhones, or smartphones for that matter. For the same price of one, I could buy a decent laptop with comparatively superior specs.
The problem with this reasoning is that even the most compact laptop doesn't fit im your pocket.
As for me, I have no reason to replace my current Android.
Doesn't matter to me one bit. My pockets are already stuffed enough as it is (wallet, keys, old cell phone, cash, etc.).
Okami wrote:I have the LG G3, and the iPhone 6's specs just seem mediocre in comparison...
IPv4 wrote:A new smartphone, Iphone 6 is coming out, probably this month. What do you guys think about the phone? I myself will most likely buy the 64gb version. That it has a good camera, 720p slow-mo recording, is flat, 4.7'' screen, new processor are enough reasons for me to get one. iWatch looks like garbage tough, why a zoom out and in function when you just can pick out your phone much more quickly?
FourFourSeven wrote:Bah. I never liked iPhones, or smartphones for that matter. For the same price of one, I could buy a decent laptop with comparatively superior specs.
IPv4 wrote:FourFourSeven wrote:Doesn't matter to me one bit. My pockets are already stuffed enough as it is (wallet, keys, old cell phone, cash, etc.).
All of that could be replaced by an iphone 6 though
Ryosuke wrote:I'm gonna bring this up. I used to own a Samsung galaxy S III, and a friend and her sister were huge iPhone lovers. From the time that they had iPhone 3 all the way to the iPhone 5s, we continually measured performance on the phones because they always wanted to proove that "iPhone is the best". And EVERY time we compared, on high power games or call quality or sound quality or pictures or web connectivity(through WiFi due to different providers to be absolutely fair) to video quality. And essentially EVERY time my aging S III was at least on par, or noticibly better, all the way to the iPhone 5s. My friend has now switched to the S III. I currently own an LG g3. There is a HUGE improvement.
To the one saying that more megapixels doesn't make a better camera... I can take a picture of the cloth in my shirt and zoom in to the point of not only seeing the fibres, but the fibres that they are made of. In detail.
As to my 4k screen... Have you ever gone to an electronics store and compared the new 4k tv's to the 1080p's? Its a huge difference.
As to my 3 gig ram. I'm not gonna say it makes a world of difference. But with snapdragon and 3gig ram, it's a noticed large improvement over my old phone.
For the record, I never recall having issues with an internal memory card. Even if you don't like it, android has access to a cloud as well. Although I'm nowhere near my 32 gigs... But I just don't have that much music on here. Just games XD
Please be open minded when looking into getting your phone. I don't hate I-products... I just don't see the flare of the heavy supporters.
Above all else, your phone should be chosen based on what you use it for. So the big question that we should all ask is: "what do you wanna use your phone for?"
Xeno wrote:I really don't want to get into a pissing match here, just calling things as I see them. I feel that I need to stress the fact that since 2007 I have owned 12 different smart phones. Android, BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, Windows Phone, and iOS all. So, given my extensive use of these devices, I'm going to readdress some of these points. Yes, I am an Apple fan. I have at least one item from each of their products lines. That said, my variance of device ownership over the last 7 years, I think, gives me some qualification into the realm of usableness.
To the one saying that more megapixels doesn't make a better camera... I can take a picture of the cloth in my shirt and zoom in to the point of not only seeing the fibres, but the fibres that they are made of. In detail.
Good, then it seems that the G3 has a very good image signal processor built in it's SoC. The problem isn't what yours does, it's what most smartphones do, which is use a basic image signal processor and just cram a bunch of megapixels into the optics to hit a higher number on a spec sheet.
I used a Samsung Galaxy Note 3 from November of last year until March of this year. It has a 13mp camera, and ever photo I took with it was utter garbage, and it got worse in low light situations. Every image from it contained artifacts and excessive grain. The 8mp camera on the 5 was leaps and bounds superior in every way, and the 5S even more than the 5. Why is this? A better image signal processor, better optics (glass) for the camera. That is what matters in a camera, not just more megapixels.
Above all else, your phone should be chosen based on what you use it for. So the big question that we should all ask is: "what do you wanna use your phone for?"
I actually agree 100% with this, and it's something I tell everyone who asks me for device suggestions. I am not anti-Android, or anti-Windows Phone, or anything else, and will openly advise people to get a device that suits their needs. Often times this ends up being an Android device like the Nexus 5 or Moto X.
Ryosuke wrote:To the one saying that more megapixels doesn't make a better camera... I can take a picture of the cloth in my shirt and zoom in to the point of not only seeing the fibres, but the fibres that they are made of. In detail.
FourFourSeven wrote:Bah. I never liked iPhones, or smartphones for that matter. For the same price of one, I could buy a decent laptop with comparatively superior specs.
Dante wrote:There is a very simple formula I have that decides whether I will get this phone or not. Will it make me more money then it costs me to own it. In particular, will it earn me a 20% ROI and will it beat the ROI I currently get from my present slide phone (costs $100/year). It might, but right now I neither have the funds for it and if I did, I would certainly bet them on other more traditional resources then an iphone (like a server, or advertising, or health insurance). For me to see an iphone as valuable, I would have to see the potential to make $1920 on it over the course of two years after purchasing the phone. That's a lotta moneyz. Someone should ask Siri if she thinks the iphone is worth that much. One positive thing is that I could actually use an iphone as a business expense (for me) as long as I use it strictly for business purposes. However, right now, I'm too poor to shell out that kind of cash for a phone.
Davidizer13 wrote:Please tell me more about how I can replace my driver's license with a smartphone app.
Xeno wrote:Dante wrote:There is a very simple formula I have that decides whether I will get this phone or not. Will it make me more money then it costs me to own it. In particular, will it earn me a 20% ROI and will it beat the ROI I currently get from my present slide phone (costs $100/year). It might, but right now I neither have the funds for it and if I did, I would certainly bet them on other more traditional resources then an iphone (like a server, or advertising, or health insurance). For me to see an iphone as valuable, I would have to see the potential to make $1920 on it over the course of two years after purchasing the phone. That's a lotta moneyz. Someone should ask Siri if she thinks the iphone is worth that much. One positive thing is that I could actually use an iphone as a business expense (for me) as long as I use it strictly for business purposes. However, right now, I'm too poor to shell out that kind of cash for a phone.
I'm poor, but if I could theoretically purchase this totally super cool device I would construct a ridiculous idea behind why owning one just doesn't make sense. #PovertyProblems #Nokia4Life
The ROI of a smartphone is how much easier it makes it to get things done. The ease it affords me is easily worth the price tag on or off contract.
Dante wrote:But can you quantify how it makes your life so much easier?
Davidizer13 wrote:Xeno's got it. I can do 90% of what I do on the computer, along with some things I can't, anywhere I've got my phone and a data connection. And I think that was cool enough to spend a couple hundred dollars on.
Speaking of spending a hundred, Dante, it sounds like you've got a pretty expensive plan for what you're after - I've got unlimited talk, text and 3G data (plus 1 GB of 4G), and it hasn't cost me more than $60 or so a month. Even if I was still paying off the phone, it would still be less than $80. Might wanna get that looked at.
(Also, weren't you complaining a ways back that your old job was giving you raises instead of cutting your hours like you really wanted? You're one to talk about economics and efficiency...)
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