Apps are indeed fun (Really the only thing I miss about the iphone), but all the applications in the world will never supplant having a more capable operating system.saichele wrote:and, for now, iPhone wins by a mile. just so many more stellar apps and specialized accessories.
Droid X, X2, or iPhone 4? [solved - iPhone]
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- KVRAF
- 10597 posts since 13 Jun, 2004 from Alberto Balsam
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- KVRian
- 621 posts since 5 Aug, 2002 from United States
Congrats Ugo, you made a good choice! iOS is the most mature Mobile OS, and has the most software available for it. It is really the only choice at this time for music creation. I think down the road the others will improve, but iOS has a big lead, and the music apps are starting to mature as well....
Anyway, have fun!
Anyway, have fun!
Dell desktop Win 10 /2012 MacBook Pro
Cubase Pro 10/Mixcraft 9
Cubase Pro 10/Mixcraft 9
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- Banned
- 3946 posts since 25 Jan, 2009
I disagree, it's the contrary: Even the most capable operating system is useless if there are no apps for it.The Chase wrote:all the applications in the world will never supplant having a more capable operating system.
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- KVRist
- 148 posts since 21 Nov, 2008
this !!!!IncarnateX wrote:I disagree, it's the contrary: Even the most capable operating system is useless if there are no apps for it.The Chase wrote:all the applications in the world will never supplant having a more capable operating system.
no matter how good the hardware and os is, if you have nothing to run on it, this beautiful box is just a useless gadget,
if you want to make music on a mobile os, Ios is the best at the moment,
certainly win 8 for arm will change the game (but when ? 1 year, 2 years, 5 years ?),
but I'don't see apple stopping the dev of ios too
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- angelboy
- 4586 posts since 21 Aug, 2001 from Larnaca, Cyprus
Three days ago I would agree with you but considering that my gf has an iPhone 4 and I just got an SGS II - I have to say that this device is so mind-blowing I couldn't live with an iPhone (or anything else currently out there TBH), even if it has some awesome music apps. I'm sure Android will get them in time - for now I'm playing a bit with Nanoloop and the CAUSTIC demo.IncarnateX wrote:I disagree, it's the contrary: Even the most capable operating system is useless if there are no apps for it.The Chase wrote:all the applications in the world will never supplant having a more capable operating system.
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- angelboy
- 4586 posts since 21 Aug, 2001 from Larnaca, Cyprus
But I would certainly get an iPod Touch for music apps though (and I may do it when iOS 5 is out and is released for iTunes
)
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- Banned
- 3946 posts since 25 Jan, 2009
But what is so mind blowing about it, if it can not run music apps? Is it so much better than an iPhone for making telephone calls? Visiting a net-site? Google maps? Checking mails? Sending sms? This is what I use a phone to do and I hardly need dual-core processors or wide screens for such basic operations. So what are you using your phone for?TristezaOrange wrote:Three days ago I would agree with you but considering that my gf has an iPhone 4 and I just got an SGS II - I have to say that this device is so mind-blowing
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- KVRAF
- 2608 posts since 26 Aug, 2002 from here
Telephone calls about the same - but short cuts to favourite callers on the desktop is niceIncarnateX wrote:But what is so mind blowing about it, if it can not run music apps? Is it so much better than an iPhone for making telephone calls? Visiting a net-site? Google maps? Checking mails? Sending sms? This is what I use a phone to do and I hardly need dual-core processors or wide screens for such basic operations. So what are you using your phone for?TristezaOrange wrote:Three days ago I would agree with you but considering that my gf has an iPhone 4 and I just got an SGS II - I have to say that this device is so mind-blowing
Visting net sites - flash 10.3 - defintely better
Google maps - better integrtation, turn by turn navigation with realtime rerouting - 3d visualisation etc
Checking e-mails - push e-mail - better again
Sending SMS - not much in it here
So in summary the Glaaxy s is better for all of those basic functions. It also adds great multitasking, better screen, use as a spare drive, better mediaplayers, better codec performance, HDMI output, etc etc etc
The only thing that iphone has over android equivalents is the apps - but to be clear that is a pretty massive thing, but I think apple will struggle to keep all their best apps to themselves. Slowly but surely you will get android equiovalents of anything good.
i0s5 will bring iphone up to the same level with a few of those android features, but the music in the cloud thing - pfft
I believe every thread should devolve into character attacks and witch-burning. It really helps the discussion.
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- Banned
- 3946 posts since 25 Jan, 2009
To each his own, I guess, and I am as far from a power-phone-user as can be and would never feel mindblowed over such things. If the basic works without crashes, it is fine for me. However, a great app like Nanostudio, that is something that can blow my mind and I wouldn't trade it for any of the bells and whistles mentioned.ericj23 wrote:So in summary the Glaaxy s is better for all of those basic functions. It also adds great multitasking, better screen, use as a spare drive, better mediaplayers, better codec performance, HDMI output, etc etc etc
Thus, there obviously are the "power-phone-user-approach" and the "Music-app-approach". Choosing one seem to leave out the other, at least until iOS get updated with further "power" functions or Andriod get some decent music apps.
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- KVRAF
- 10597 posts since 13 Jun, 2004 from Alberto Balsam
Feelsgoodman.jpg, to lose the general feeling of handicap/castration from having a less functionable/customizable device.TristezaOrange wrote:Three days ago I would agree with you but considering that my gf has an iPhone 4 and I just got an SGS II - I have to say that this device is so mind-blowing I couldn't live with an iPhone (or anything else currently out there TBH), even if it has some awesome music apps. I'm sure Android will get them in time - for now I'm playing a bit with Nanoloop and the CAUSTIC demo.IncarnateX wrote:I disagree, it's the contrary: Even the most capable operating system is useless if there are no apps for it.The Chase wrote:all the applications in the world will never supplant having a more capable operating system.
Going from a home screen that is a widget-based multitasking environment to a home screen that is a grid in an OS that requires fiddling through multiple screens to adjust basic properties, alone, was kind of like losing a limb. Then there is going from swype back to peck-and-pray, going from OLED back to LCD, from centralized non-disruptive notifcations to pop-ups and app icons having their own represented by a tiny number on their icon, from multitasking back to task-switching...ugh.
iOS 5 seems promising though, finally getting some lockscreen widgets, better notifications and social media integration.
Going from 400,000 to 200,000 apps is hardly going to zero.IncarnateX wrote:I disagree, it's the contrary: Even the most capable operating system is useless if there are no apps for it.The Chase wrote:all the applications in the world will never supplant having a more capable operating system.
Plenty of Android apps utilize multitasking, come with a widget, have functionality in the notification drop-down, and replace system apps - OS functionality matters.
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- KVRAF
- 2875 posts since 28 Jan, 2004 from Da Nang, Vietnam
Android is gaining ground fast. Outside of music apps I expect app availability to be at least as good on Android as on iOS soon. Among my friends that do mobile development the word is that the iOS app developer market is now saturated and that the good money is now in Android.The Chase wrote: Going from 400,000 to 200,000 apps is hardly going to zero.
Personally I'm doing iOS dev now because music apps are what I care most about but if Android ever gets its audio stack together I'll definitely switch.
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- Banned
- 3946 posts since 25 Jan, 2009
I am talking about music apps and not apps in general and I yet have to see an Android music app that is anyway near such apps as Nanostudio, Beat Maker II, Aurora HD, iSequence and others from my sig, including the abilities of these to work together by virtue of copy and paste transfer.The Chase wrote:Going from 400,000 to 200,000 apps is hardly going to zero. .
Yes, to the extent that an OS that doesn't work is a PITA but on my iPod and iPad, the iOS is working just fine, so we are not any way near that level of dysfunctioning. The other things you mention are just bells and whistles to me. No matter what specs of my phone, it will never be a mindblowing experience for me to check my mail, visit a website or view photos from a phone. It wouldn't even be on wide screen PCs.The Chase wrote:OS functionality matters.
I prefer good programs over good operation systems and can hardly understand the reverse priority; It seems to be rather conceptual than functional considering the things you can actually use your phone for.
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- KVRAF
- 2875 posts since 28 Jan, 2004 from Da Nang, Vietnam
The good news is that there is real competition in this market. As long as there are two or three viable choices every company has to try harder.jones-y wrote:the battle between iOS and Android looks awful familiar, doesn't it?
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- KVRer
- 2 posts since 20 Oct, 2011
Android's multitasking is apparently better compared to the iPhone's which usually just suspends the apps. How does this difference affect music creation apps?