Leave him alone, he's on a roll.
Lunch is almost over in his middle school.
Leave him alone, he's on a roll.
Lunch is almost over in his middle school.
OP is like the kid wondering why people buy BMWs when a Camaro has a better 0-60.
The hardware components of each phone are almost identical.
Your analogy is not valid.
You lost the debate. You kn
xczxz wrote:
That's quite a remark, coming from you.
DPD wrote:
Android is an operating system, not a phone.
Meaning what, the Google is not responsible for the low-quality. Well, Apple makes iOS, but is responsible for the phone quality. Google passes the buck and then claims "quality is not out problem."
Yes, your recess is over.
Because after having apple products for years everything works together. I'd have to replace so many other things if I changed phones now. Phone, Tablet,Computer, plus I'd need to find something other than I-Tunes and it's a pretty simple, straight forward system. My 4-S does more than I need it to already, and I sure don't want to "upgrade" to something bigger. The last time I looked the pockets of my slacks aren't getting any bigger, so why would I want my phone to? I'd settle for a phone with fast internet and email that was 1/3 smaller than the 4-S. Why do I need my phone to think for me? If I wanted an obnoxious voice telling me what to do, I'd stay home.
More like BMW when a Ford Escort is much cheaper.
Star wrote:
Honestly, there are too many Android choices.
If you choose Android then you get bombarded with all kinds of sub choices and have to do research to figure which one may be best for you.
If you choose iPhone you just choosing color or whether to get the latest one.
So people choose iPhones because they are lazy? It seems like you would do your research when buying something expensive that your going to use everyday for the next 2 years. Switching from iTunes to Google Music was very easy for me but I can see how it would be a pain point for some people.
The iPhone is a better integrated product which is especially appealing to the non-technical user. Some people are willing to pay more for that. I'm not one of them, but it's not that hard to see the appeal.
does anyone have a response from the pro android point of view on how easy/hard it is to use itunes in android?
meaning, moving my entire library over to android and then buying music in itunes for my pc and moving it over to my android phone and keeping them synced?
it sounds like a nightmare.
phones phones phones wrote:
I sell Android-based devices. BUY MY STUFF!!!
We figured that out already.
agip wrote:
does anyone have a response from the pro android point of view on how easy/hard it is to use itunes in android?
meaning, moving my entire library over to android and then buying music in itunes for my pc and moving it over to my android phone and keeping them synced?
it sounds like a nightmare.
Google actually manages all of this for you with a tool called Google Music Manager. It will sync your iTunes for you. Its actually pretty simple to use, it stores all of your music for you in the cloud. You access all of your music and playlist through the Google music app (which you can also get on iPhone), and you can go to music.google.com to view and use all of your music on a computer. It actually works really well but not many people know about it.
I use an Android phone and an I-pad and it works great. I find both have their pros and cons but nothing to get too worked up about. I have a huge amount of music and a lot is on I-Tunes and that works on my laptop too.
Honestly, some of you have way too much time on your hands with the emotion you expend defending things that are just tools you use during your day.
phones phones phones wrote:
agip wrote:does anyone have a response from the pro android point of view on how easy/hard it is to use itunes in android?
meaning, moving my entire library over to android and then buying music in itunes for my pc and moving it over to my android phone and keeping them synced?
it sounds like a nightmare.
Google actually manages all of this for you with a tool called Google Music Manager. It will sync your iTunes for you. Its actually pretty simple to use, it stores all of your music for you in the cloud. You access all of your music and playlist through the Google music app (which you can also get on iPhone), and you can go to music.google.com to view and use all of your music on a computer. It actually works really well but not many people know about it.
I have been buying music in itunes for a decade - is digital rights management an issue? will some of my itunes songs be unplayable in google music manager?
Google Music wrote:
[quote]phones phones phones wrote:
I sell Android-based devices. BUY MY STUFF!!!
end.quote
We figured that out already.
Hahaha very far from the truth, I've owned a few iPhones and a few Androids, but I am really liking Android a lot these days.
Thank you for the info on Google Music Manager. I've seen that but never heard of any first hand use of the app.
I'll check it out later, thanks!
Older guy wrote:
Honestly, some of you have way too much time on your hands with the emotion you expend defending things that are just tools you use during your day.
phones^3 is using the forums to advertise Android products he sells.
agip wrote:
I have been buying music in itunes for a decade - is digital rights management an issue? will some of my itunes songs be unplayable in google music manager?
I'm not sure about all of that stuff, but I've had no problem with songs that I bought on iTunes. Maybe this can help
https://support.google.com/googleplay/answer/1229970Google Music has an app for Mac laptops/desktops. It looks just like iTunes. Imagine that, looking the same.
http://lifehacker.com/google-music-for-mac-is-a-standalone-player-with-media-1530086473