
Yesterday’s conversion with a friend of mine went something along the lines of me telling him that I had come back to my roots and got an iPhone. His reply was a simple one, “hahaha, they all come crawling back..”
Sad, but true. But perhaps it doesn’t apply to everyone. In the past I considered myself an Apple Mac fanatic, however my friend which I broke the news to has taken over the reigns in that department. In his case, fanatic would be an understatement – obsessed would be more fitting.
Moving on. So, why did I jump ship back to the Apple iPhone you ask? Well, I guess one of the key things here was friends and family having this device and letting me play with it for a bit. When the iPhone 4 was launched, I wasn’t really phased by it one bit. Steve Jobs went about his way announcing all the features, gadgets and gizmos that the iPhone had and all I had to say was meh. My mind was made up at that stage and I wanted to try the Android platform.. and I lasted about 2 months or so on it.
Apps
I should have realised browsing the Android Market that the Apps were shit – and they are in comparison to the quality of those in the AppStore. Almost every App on the Android platform I came across had ads embedded with a poor UI, or they failed in the usability department. In the end, the AppStore is far superior to the Android Market and I missed the Apps I had on my iPhone 3G, so this was one of the deciding factors.
Display
The display on the iPhone 4 is quite awesome I must admit. I found the display on the HTC Desire very good, but the iPhone’s display is easily a few notches ahead. The text is very crisp and easy to read with the colours vibrant.
Network
This was probably the only thing I was skeptical about. From general use so far, I feel the HTC Desire wins in this department. I was expecting web browsing (although Safari and Androids browsers use different rendering engines) and the AppStore to be faster on the Optus network now that the iPhone supports additional mobile frequencies. But this doesn’t entirely seem to be the case. In general it is much faster than the 3G.
Also, I’m not quite sure what this nonsense about the death grip was. I haven’t experienced any signal problems or calls dropping due to holding the phone in a certain way. Perhaps the Americans have issues with their networks over there. I noticed with the Desire that the data connection would drop every once in a while, the iPhone doesn’t seem to do this at all. I couldn’t find out why the Desire did either.
Camera, Video
I’m not quite sure about this one. In terms of raw picture quality, the iPhone and Desire camera seem pretty on-par to me. What I do like about the iPhone is the HDR setting which makes photo’s just that little bit better. Although I do miss the FxCamera App on the Android which offers some cool on the fly post-processing. With Android 2.2 came “720p video recording” which wasn’t too bad, although I feel the iPhone wins in some environments.
Battery
The iPhone’s battery is kick-ass. So far the longest I’ve gotten out of it is 2 days, 8 hours stand by with 7 hours, 54 minutes of usage which included gaming, phone calls, web browsing and using the AppStore over WiFi/3G. With the Desire, I was lucky to get just over a day with it, it just seems to be a battery hungry thing. Charge times seem to be similar (correction, the iPhone also charges faster here too) between both devices whilst using the wall charger, however via USB the iPhone wins hands down. The Desire could sometimes charge for hours on end, but perhaps I was using some rubbish USB cable?
20 Oct - Taking another look at battery life a few weeks later – On average I manage to get 5-6 hours of mixed usage and 2 days+ standby, — the highest being 5hrs, 3 days standby. This leaves the Desire in dust.
Overall, I enjoyed using the HTC Desire, but I must say my heart definitely belongs to the iPhone, I simply missed it too much. Apple has done a superb job with the iPhone 4, it is a great product.
Filed in iPhone
