Subliminal
Member
Well, Gingerbread will be sorting out the theme and design issues. And hopefully providing a good unified design for all devices that want it.
Subliminal said:Wow, the android one certainly looks sleekest.
Futureman said:I've played with both and the iPhone one is better IMO. The scrolling is so much smoother. Maybe that's changed with an update though?
Futureman said:I've played with both and the iPhone one is better IMO. The scrolling is so much smoother. Maybe that's changed with an update though?
Futureman said:I've played with both and the iPhone one is better IMO. The scrolling is so much smoother. Maybe that's changed with an update though?
ZZMitch said:And the answer to this question is iPad, iPod Touches and iPhones still > Android devices, and I think it will be a long while before that changes.
josephdebono said:How is that related to the civil discussion we're having here.
gtfo.gif
There have been a lot of people who have made the comparison that Android will likely become the "Windows" of the mobile space and iOS would become the "Mac OS"...meaning the marketshare would likely be massively dominated by Android, but there would be a smaller but very active subset of people working within the iOS space.ToxicAdam said:It kind of reminds me of the PC days in the 90's. There was A LOT of shareware that was shit ... but every once in awhile, someone created this brilliant software that becomes a must have.
They also tie into the iTunes App Store and serve as an additional market for developers to create apps. As many iPhones that are out there in the wild, there are nearly as many iPod Touches.josephdebono said:How is that related to the civil discussion we're having here.
Very true...and considering how many millions of iPads are selling these days in addition to the Touches and iPhones, the number of iOS devices would most likely outpace Android devices unless they start branching out into stand-alone music players and/or tablets as well.numble said:They also tie into the iTunes App Store and serve as an additional market for developers to create apps. As many iPhones that are out there in the wild, there are nearly as many iPod Touches.
ZZMitch said:The update for facebook on android just became availiable yesterday or so.
And the answer to this question is iPad, iPod Touches and iPhones still > Android devices, and I think it will be a long while before that changes.
numble said:They also tie into the iTunes App Store and serve as an additional market for developers to create apps. As many iPhones that are out there in the wild, there are nearly as many iPod Touches.
*pie chart*
numble said:They also tie into the iTunes App Store and serve as an additional market for developers to create apps. As many iPhones that are out there in the wild, there are nearly as many iPod Touches.
That graph is actually from the first Google search I found, which isn't the best indicator--since it seemed to be estimates from some blog. Here it is from Steve in April, it is surprisingly close--41:58 ratio:RubxQub said:Very true...and considering how many millions of iPads are selling these days in addition to the Touches and iPhones, the number of iOS devices would most likely outpace Android devices unless they start branching out into stand-alone music players and/or tablets as well.
I'd love to see a breakdown of iPod Touch users vs. iPhone users in regards to applications downloaded and money spent...haven't seen that at all, but considering the marketshare in your graph, they have a ton more weight than I ever gave them credit for.
What are you basing this prediction on?andycapps said:As far as the OP goes, what's probably going to happen is that the Android market will eventually pass the iPhone/iTouch market, probably sometime first half of next year, if that long.
Palm had to make that facebook app themselves, so sad :/Subliminal said:Its very web 2.0 with its glass bubbles and disgusting yet classy font.
The fake "web 2.0" term isn't about a look, it's about consumers being the creators and two-way communication on websites.Subliminal said:Its very web 2.0 with its glass bubbles and disgusting yet classy font.
Liu Kang Baking A Pie said:What are you basing this prediction on?
I have to imagine the iPod Touch is basically Apple's gateway drug to the iPhone. Once someone buys an iPod Touch...they've got to start thinking about how nice it would be to have all the things the iPod Touch does and just include mobile internet and phone capabilities to it instead of having to carry around two separate devices.numble said:That graph is actually from the first Google search I found, which isn't the best indicator--since it seemed to be estimates from some blog. Here it is from Steve in April, it is surprisingly close--41:58 ratio:
I don't know, I would have agreed with you up until iPhone 4 with iOS 4. There was a lot of grumbling about the iPhone system before then, but I think a lot of people are happy now, and developer wait time for app approval has gone way down and Apple are also more descriptive with their reasons for rejection.andycapps said:Just a guess, I didn't do any serious number crunching. I know how many units Android moved this last quarter, the previous quarter, and the quarter before that so it seems like it's increasing astronomically. Rate the market is growing seems to be growing. I would think more and more devs will move over and develop apps (like RubxDub thought). But yeah, the timeline was just a guess. I'm sure someone could come up with a better guess. I don't really care about number of apps, I just want good games, STAT. So Popcap and co need to get serious and not just put 1 or 2 games on there.
Is now 100+ million as of the end of July, confirmed from their Q3 conference call.numble said:
Liu Kang Baking A Pie said:What are you basing this prediction on?
Liu Kang Baking A Pie said:I don't know, I would have agreed with you up until iPhone 4 with iOS 4. There was a lot of grumbling about the iPhone system before then, but I think a lot of people are happy now, and developer wait time for app approval has gone way down and Apple are also more descriptive with their reasons for rejection.
josephdebono said:Purely to have all information at hand I'm posting this: http://www.androlib.com/appstats.aspx
It's not mean as proof for or against his argument, I'm just putting it here for information purposes.
If there is a similar graph for iPhone apps someone could probably extrapolate and come up with a decent approximation.
According the the first graph there was a growth of ~100,000 apps in one year.
andycapps said:GTFO with that shit.
Drugs is my guess, and the assumption that the smartphone market will remain static for ever and ever.Liu Kang Baking A Pie said:What are you basing this prediction on?
giga said:![]()
(includes iPad apps)
ZZMitch said:I am talking about in quantity, bro. Anyone that browses the Android threads in this forum would know that I am an Android user...
ZZMitch said:I am talking about in quantity, bro. Anyone that browses the Android threads in this forum would know that I am an Android user...
No idea about that site, but I'd prefer to trust numbers from the horses mouth. Analytical app sites like those always seem to be off. (http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2010/07/15/goog-google-posts-q2-2010-results/)josephdebono said:I found this site for iPhone apps: http://148apps.biz/app-store-metrics/?mpage=appcount
I don't know how reliable it is but according to it's statistics there are about 15000-20000 apps added a month.
false. the apple ads laid out in perpetuity that apple is justin longridley182 said:Drugs is my guess, and the assumption that the smartphone market will remain static for ever and ever.
If Google wants to improve they definitively need some kind of quality control, which they can't do because that would be too much like Apple and Apple is eeeeeviiiil and Google is teh gud.
RubxQub said:This is not a "LOL iPhone is better" or "PWNED! Android has more marketshare" type thread. Please don't let it get that way.
giga said:No idea about that site, but I'd prefer to trust numbers from the horses mouth. Analytical app sites like those always seem to be off. (http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2010/07/15/goog-google-posts-q2-2010-results/)
Actually, ignore my 15k post as well. Just re-watched that part of the keynote and the 15k number is from new apps and updates to existing apps.josephdebono said:Well according to that article AndroLib was wrong so that throws all my sources out the window. Ignore me please. :lol
How much have you actually spent? And how much would it cost to replace to the extent you wanted to? Probably cost you like five bucks or less.Brera said:Another problem is, I've been on an iPhone since they came out and the AppStore since day 1. I have so much investment in it, it wouldn't ever make sense to move.
giga said:Actually, ignore my 15k post as well. Just re-watched that part of the keynote and the 15k number is from new apps and updates to existing apps.
AstroLad said:How much have you actually spent? And how much would it cost to replace to the extent you wanted to? Probably cost you like five bucks or less.
I've spent $100 on just one app that I use daily and is not available on Android.AstroLad said:How much have you actually spent? And how much would it cost to replace to the extent you wanted to? Probably cost you like five bucks or less.
numble said:I've spent $100 on just one app that I use daily and is not available on Android.
numble said:I've spent $100 on just one app that I use daily and is not available on Android.
True in some cases.Nerevar said:Not only that, most of the more "expensive" apps are disposable ones (like games). The core functionality apps are mostly identical and free across the platforms.
radioheadrule83 said:I prefer the look of the WebOS one myself, that looks nice!
RubxQub said:How does purchasing content on Android actually work? Do you setup a credit card with your Google account that they just let you reuse over and over like iTunes, or do you have to put in your credit card info every time or what?
My hair, bird, invalid, etc.AstroLad said:false. the apple ads laid out in perpetuity that apple is justin long
I bet the devs just love that featurejosephdebono said:Google Checkout. You also have 24 hours trial period where you can uninstall the app and get a full refund.
AstroLad said:How much have you actually spent? And how much would it cost to replace to the extent you wanted to? Probably cost you like five bucks or less.