this post was submitted on 15 Oct 2023
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Apple

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I had an iPhone 3G, then 4, then switched to a Nexus 4, LG G4, LG G5, Pixel 2 and then Pixel 5. Just in case anyone else is thinking of moving from a Pixel, I moved (back) to using an iPhone because:

Pixel 5 reaching end-of-support for OS/security updates. Battery life starting to show its age. Pixel 8 is (still) too big. Really, really not a fan of the camera bar on the later Pixels. Apple’s physical presence in my country makes repairs etc. quicker and easier. Switch to USB-C meant cables and chargers could be kept. Although not limited to Google, OS features are often US specific. Started getting adverts in Google Feed. Fed up with Google deprecating things (bitten by stadia). I realised I didn’t actually customise my phone much.

The Good: Pretty much identical in size to the Pixel 5. OS is fast and polished. Apps are generally very good quality. Anecdotally, there seem to be more apps with (albeit expensive) lifetime purchase options. Nice touches like reminding me that I’ve left my iPad behind. 80% charging limit is nice to have. Video quality good. Photos seem fine but maybe blurrier than Pixel? Seems to be easier to have apps from two different country’s stores installed on the phone. Notification system not as bad as expected.

The Bad: The glass back is a constant source of worry. Muscle memory for the volume buttons and fingerprint reader will take some time to forget. Volume opposite power button means I keep accidentally taking screenshots. Slightly jealous about Pixel 8’s new camera abilities. Can’t use credit cards from two different countries with Apple Pay (I think). Anecdotally, more apps seem to require subscriptions.

The Ugly: Losing Threema and Signal chat histories. Have to keep the Pixel to keep my late mum’s original chats. Just let me put app icons where I want, please. App settings are all over the place. Notification volume much louder than ring volume but (often) can’t be individually changed? Notification system not as good as it could be. Ancient and irritating limitation on using own ringtones. Let me remove, not just blank, sources in the News app. Needs to learn that I swear continuously much more quickly. I miss Öffi.

Despite the bad/ugly points, the good, in combination with my original reasons for switching, mean I’ve no real regrets.

If I find any other points I’ll update this. Please let me know if I’ve got any of the iOS limitations wrong, and apologies in advance if my formatting is crappy, or anyone considers this sort of post pointless - just trying to add some content to Lemmy - being the change I want to see… :-)

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[–] hperrin@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I personally like the notification system. Everything comes in in order and stays in that order. I can remove things if I want, or just ignore them, and they never really feel like they’re all piled up.

[–] speendle 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Maybe it’s just familiarity on my part, but the Android one seemed much more straightforward in terms of acting on notifications, replying directly to messages there, and so on. I’m sure/I hope I’ll get used to the iOS one.

[–] Supercharger@lemm.ee 2 points 1 year ago

The quick action buttons are great on Android, but I otherwise prefer how iOS keeps them out of the way. On Android, my status bar is always full anyway, so I'd prefer to have empty, like on iOS, since I'm not getting useful information anyway.

[–] EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I have the opposite issues. I’m constantly overloaded with notifications and I get teased all the time because I end up with a notification history going back a full week. I’ve had N iPhone for 2 years and I just haven’t seem to have got a hang of iPhone notifications lol.

[–] Petter1@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Just clear the Notification Center often and use the feature to get some notifications from specific apps at specific time you yourself choose.

[–] EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I do both already but it hasn’t helped. I think it has something to do with how iOS hides a lot of notifications behind a second swipe. That’s just never been intuitive for me and I don’t look under the second swipe except for like once a week when I think of it.

[–] Petter1@lemm.ee 0 points 1 year ago

I can only recommend to block more app from pushing notifications then..