ridley182 said:Meh. Most of those features seem to be designed to help you save battery life. My iPhone's battery life is excellent, even with all features on, I can use the damn thing all day long and the battery life will still be at 55 or 65%. In short, iPhone devs don't dream those up because they don't need to.
I can see those features being useful on battery hogging Android phones like the Evo though.
ivedoneyourmom said:I think that is something both android and iPhone users can agree on.(except for filthy 'pirates' which muck up everything, pay the damn 99c)
I admit I don't have enough knowledge of individual apps on the android platform either. Maybe this is something one should look at rather than these silly 10000 per week approved, I can turn off Bluetooth with telekinesis etc arguments.
I know I have good and bad experiences with my iPhone and I am sure android users have similar problems.
And you think then AppStore has a lower percentage? :loljosephdebono said:True. Numbers really don't say anything especially for the android market. I'm willing to say that 40-50% of those are crap.
josephdebono said:True. Numbers really don't say anything especially for the android market. I'm willing to say that 40-50% of those are crap.
Wait, you are trying to argue that my arguments are invalid because I am biased? :lolgcubed said:http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=22690278&postcount=206
this post basically sums up every thread you are ever in in relation to phones.
Charred Greyface said:And you think then AppStore has a lower percentage? :lol
ridley182 said:Wait, you are trying to argue that my arguments are invalid because I am biased? :lol
Newsflash: I am biased. You are obviously biased. Everyone in the world is biased in one way or another. Welcome to the internet.
The app store definitively has a lower percentage of crap apps compared to the Android market. With that said, the App Store has probably more crap apps than the Android Market because well, it just has more apps.Charred Greyface said:And you think then AppStore has a lower percentage? :lol
- I own FeedR. But there are still multiple different feed readers and google reader clients available for free if you want them, FeedR was just the one that worked best for my needs.giga said:Cydia would offer those freedoms, right?
Well, don't we all want what we pay to be of quality? Paid apps only totaling just 6% of your share seems incredibly low, but it's inline with that recent survey showing that the majority of apps on the Android Marketplace are free. I get the feeling that this is due in part to developers not charging for their apps as they either can't or a large proportion of their customer base can't purchase paid apps. (see my previous post on paid app limitations)
Developers still have to monetize somehow. Perhaps they're providing an ad or click supported version that users can tolerate.
Here are some of the apps I've paid for. Now, I know it's hard to get a feel of the quality of these apps without using them first hand, but you can trust me when I vouch for their value. Sure there are free options that provide similar or near functionality, but they're often hampered by their UI, performance, and design. Would Android users (or yourself) be willing to pay extra for that extra touch of quality?
Reeder: http://reederapp.com/2/
PCalc: http://www.pcalc.com/iphone/index.html
Deep Green: http://cocoastuff.com/products/deepgreen/
Pastebot: http://tapbots.com/software/pastebot/
Convertbot: http://tapbots.com/software/convertbot/
Flight Track: http://firemint.com/?page_id=565
Camera+: http://campl.us/
Delivery Status: http://junecloud.com/software/iphone/delivery-status-touch.html
Articles: http://www.sophiestication.com/articles/
iMovie: http://www.apple.com/iphone/features/imovie.html
josephdebono said:I honestly wouldn't know. Never actually had a look around the AppStore. All i know that to look for beautiful widgets i looked up 'beautiful' and well, yeah.
MarkMclovin said:The only problem I have with the Marketplace, is that I only seem to find the best widgets and apps through word of mouth, forums or Gaf.
I think they should split the Market between widgets and apps too.
GoldenEye 007 said:Although I see what you're trying to say, but just did a search for 'beautiful' myself. Second result was beautiful widgets. Yeah, there is a lot of crap after that, but if you knew that you were looking for beautiful widgets, why does it even matter what is present after the fact?
Oh, ok. That's what I was saying, then. If you've easily enough found what you were looking for, what does it matter if there is excess crap there?josephdebono said:My point is that there's a lot of crap not that I couldn't find what I was looking for.
GoldenEye 007 said:Oh, ok. That's what I was saying, then. If you've easily enough found what you were looking for, what does it matter if there is excess crap there?
If I've lost my car keys, then found them, I'm done. I no longer have concern for anything else; my main task was accomplished.
Oh yeah, that's of course true. Numbers are padded around the board for sure with things that aren't really useful apps or possibly not true apps at all.josephdebono said:Doesn't affect me really. Just proving my point that the actual number of apps doesn't really bear any significance in terms of what is actually available.
Yeah, it seems like we differ a lot on our purchases. Of course there are always free equivalents of apps, but I'm just one who chooses to pay more for a better experience and interface. Putting Deep Green, PCalc, and Convertbot in the same category as the thousands of other chess apps is a travesty!Jayge said:- I own FeedR. But there are still multiple different feed readers and google reader clients available for free if you want them, FeedR was just the one that worked best for my needs.
- No use for the calculator.
- Not the biggest fan of chess, but honestly, a chintzy chess program is probably the worst example of something someone might be willing to pay extra for that I've ever seen. There are thousands of other free chess apps out there. As a fan of utility over glam, you wouldn't see that on any device I own (unless it's DAMN pretty). And that sure as hell isn't 8 bones pretty.
- That copy and paste thing would be something I'm interested in, but I wouldn't pay 4 dollars for it.
- You can get several different things just like ConvertBot for free.
- There's an ad-supported equivalent of Flight Control on the Market, and a paid version too. I wouldn't pay for it. I don't use my phone much to game and I can play infinitely better free flash games on my PC.
- I might pay for that camera thing if I cared enough, but HTC's camera app and my LED light app do most of what that one seems to do anyway. Don't really see the value in it.
- I already have a perfectly good free package tracker for my Evo. It supports UPS, USPS, FedEx and I think a few more which are all I order from so I'm set on that front. It does exactly what I need and nothing more or less. Why pay $5 to make it shinier?
- I would not pay to make Wikipedia prettier, no. I can go out and find my own knowledge if I want, and Wikipedia already has a random article button.
- Jackpot. I would definitely pay for that. It's ridiculously powerful for something on a phone and it is unique enough to warrant the price tag because there isn't much like it or anything that can even compare.
See, the thing is, I really don't see a point in paying for more than I need, for the most part. And most of those apps have perfectly functional free equivalents that do just as well even though they don't have as much of a spit-shine. But you shouldn't let that come across as "I'm unwilling to support developers whose programs I enjoy." I donated to the ChompSMS project (messaging replacement app) to remove ads but also to help keep the project going because it's one of the best apps I have on my phone. Same for Launcher Pro Plus because even if I don't need the premium features he's offering right now, I want that project to keep on going and I know it'll return massive value in the future. There are also certain cases where some free apps are just too ugly and badly coordinated to use, where some nice menus really do make the difference. This is why I own Touiteur, a gorgeous twitter app for android (that also has fantastic widgets and really awesome functionality).
Then there's also the fact that I like trying to find my own unique or interesting solutions to problems that I could just solve by paying for something. I would rather combine a few different apps to get some cool synergistic interplay than pay money for something that does that thing without the other setup because building those kinds of systems is just interesting to me. There are a lot of reasons to buy apps, and a lot of reasons not to buy them. But the general mentality on Android seems to be that if you want to put something in your pocket, you're going to need to impress the shit out of us.
Yep.GoldenEye 007 said:Oh yeah, that's of course true. Numbers are padded around the board for sure with things that aren't really useful apps or possibly not true apps at all.
I do like the new rating system, though. It really helps in weeding out useful apps from wastes of time. I sometimes just go to the all app category, select the top free or paid category, then scroll around for things that look somewhat useful to me. Comments and ratings take over from there.
RubxQub said: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.
Makes sense to me, as Google seems to have a pretty "Windowsy" model of distribution. Put it on pretty much any hardware you want, while Apple is again going the "Only Apple" method of distribution again. Seems like a pretty cut and dry outcome in terms of overall marketshare unless something crazy happens.
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.
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Oh, I don't even use AppBrain. This is browsing just from my phone's marketplace.Jayge said:Yep.
Another thing that is great about AppBrain is the Recommended Apps section where it tries to find similar apps to ones you have that it thinks you might like, which is very nice. It also has a hottest apps section for the last 24 hours and the last 7 days, so you can see whatever the trends are and what's on the up and up. Seriously guys, use AppBrain :lol
hold on a minute. the App Store was structurally just as good then as it is today. they just have more apps now. but the organization of it hasn't changed at all.Freyjadour said:All for $1.99
Market does seem less appealing, but the App Store wasn't much better a few years ago.
GoldenEye 007 said:Oh, I don't even use AppBrain. This is browsing just from my phone's marketplace.
I'm saying you should check it out, I think you'd like itGoldenEye 007 said:Oh, I don't even use AppBrain. This is browsing just from my phone's marketplace.
In some ways, Google does do that. For instance, I've definitely downloaded apps that were displayed on my Marketplace widget as ads. Also, there are featured apps scrolling on the main app screen in each category in addition to apps featured in other parts of the Marketplace browsing experience. It definitely is not as in depth as I remember the App Store being with spotlighting a certain app or putting them in commercials or something (with the nature of the marketplace, I'm sure handset manufacturers would have to be relied on to highlight a particular app in a commercial or something since Google failed to really utilize the N1 to maybe push some things), but some level of that is there.LCfiner said:Question to those with Android phones who have used the Marketplace:
do you think the Android marketplace would benefit from Google pushing it more and focusing a spotlight on apps the way apple does? do you think Google should have more of a hand in organizing and showcasing apps and actively pursuing devs to bring AAA titles to the platform? Are they capable of doing this without stepping on the toes of the carriers or handset makers? (ie: Is Google in a position to do this considering how much leverage those other two entities have with Android?)
my impression is that Android marketplace is much more the realm of hobbyists since theres still little money to be made and a relatively small worldwide market to sell to compared to the Apple App store. I feel Google (I dont think the carriers will do this) should start making a bigger effort to highlight apps from 3rd parties. in commercials, on the web. everywhere.
numble said:I've talked about it before. It's called Pleco and Its a universal app for iPhone and iPad. It combines 10 licensed Chinese-English (and one Chinese-Chinese) dictionary, an eReader (that is great on iPad) that let's you load up Chinese documents and give you a ton of popup definitions from the various dictionaries when you poke on a Chinese word, a modified Safari browser that does the same as the eReader, andca spaced-repetition flashcard system that integrates with the dictionaries to test you on everything from writing and tones. There's a long Android thread on the site's forum, and the developer is adamant that there won't be an Android version for a long time.
Living in China at the moment and it's great--I use the iPad version at work to read Chinese documents and at home to read Chinese news articles, and on the subway and out and about I'm either drilling myself in vocabulary or looking up words that I encounter on the street or when spoken to.
The open source Chinese dictionary out there that a lot of apps are based on isn't up to snuff (and I can use it with the other paid licensed dictionaries on Pleco anyway), at least for my current needs.
Isn't that just have "lite" version of apps and then you can upgrade to paid versions?josephdebono said:
Subliminal said:Wow, the android one certainly looks sleekest.
Does the iOS one route some functions to touch.facebook.com like the android one does?quadriplegicjon said:The iOS version and the Android version are actually very similar, he just posted pictures of different screens.
Unknown Soldier said:My friend has a lightsaber app on his iPhone, when you wave it around it makes the familiar lightsaber noises. I searched for one on Android Market for my new Droid X and couldn't find anything.
numble said:![]()
Stolen from Keyser Soze: The iTunes App Store on iPad now has Genius recommendations based on past downloads/purchases. I think this will be a pretty cool idea. Does iOS 4 on iPhone have the same thing yet? I haven't updated my old 3G.
numble said:http://s4.tinypic.com/15g8lko.jpg
Stolen from Keyser Soze: The iTunes App Store on iPad now has Genius recommendations based on past downloads/purchases. I think this will be a pretty cool idea. Does iOS 4 on iPhone have the same thing yet? I haven't updated my old 3G.
between iphone genius store, pandora, and last.fm, i've found last.fm to have the best recs, although i've gotten decent recs from each of them at times. i should note i don't really use any of them heavily just fiddle around from time to timeNerevar said:In my experience the "Genius" recommendations on the music side have been much more "miss" than "hit". I'd be surprised if it was any different on the apps side.
MidgarBlowedUp said:I simply can't do all this for that price on the iphone.
AstroLad said:between iphone genius store, pandora, and last.fm, i've found last.fm to have the best recs, although i've gotten decent recs from each of them at times. i should note i don't really use any of them heavily just fiddle around from time to time
yeah for me pandora plays super mainstream stuff even when i set the radio off a really obscure artist. last.fm tends to do the opposite, which is much more what i'm looking for, but then again i guess they have the benefit of having logged thousands of plays from me and they do a pretty decent job with that info imoNerevar said:Sometimes I feel like the person who built the Pandora recommendation engine is the same person who built the Netflix recommendation engine. Do you like "action-oriented violent gory science fiction"? Do you like "guitar-oriented high tempo rock and roll with female vocals"? Honestly, what the hell guys.
numble said:http://s4.tinypic.com/15g8lko.jpg[IMG]
Stolen from Keyser Soze: The iTunes App Store on iPad now has Genius recommendations based on past downloads/purchases. I think this will be a pretty cool idea. Does iOS 4 on iPhone have the same thing yet? I haven't updated my old 3G.[/QUOTE]
The android market doesn't have anything like this, but appbrain, a 3rd party interface to the same market, does have a recommendation system (in both its web browser client, and android client)
gcubed said:http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=22690278&postcount=206
this post basically sums up every thread you are ever in in relation to phones.
Andrex said:I really would like to attempt to port my in-development game to iPhone, just to compare the experiences. But the base I'm using is highly tied to Android, and mix that in with predisposed preferences, it probably won't happen.![]()
Also I don't have a Mac or iOS device to test on. Ah well.
If I were making things from scratch, I'd try to do it primarily using C in the NDK to make porting as painless as possible. This developer did the opposite and was able to port his iPhone game to Android in about a week, which is quite frankly impressive. Thus, the reason games aren't prominent in Android yet is probably either worrying over piracy or ignorance at how easy the process is, probably a bit of both. I think the piracy issue will become less problematic as time goes on, Google had a big presence at GDC and they just released a hugely improved official DRM system.