Comparison Ios Vs Android
Essay by Nicolas • April 2, 2012 • Essay • 449 Words (2 Pages) • 3,473 Views
Total devices in the field. At Apple's iPhone 4S launch event on October 4th, CEO Tim Cook said that the company had sold 250 million iOS devices to date--including iPhones, iPod Touches, iPads, and (I assume) current-generation Apple TVs. Shortly thereafter, Google CEO Larry Page said that 190 million Android devices had been "activated." (Google talks about units in terms of activations, not sales.)
The first iPhone went on sale 16 months before the first Android phone, so iOS had a head start--but according to these numbers, the handful of models that Apple has released to date have still managed to outsell hundreds of Android-based gadgets.
New devices sold daily. I don't believe either Apple or Google has released information on this recently. But as of the second calendar quarter of 2011, Apple was selling around 367,000 iOS devices a day. And in June, Android honcho Andy Rubin said a half-million Android devices were being activated each day. Both figures are presumably significantly different now.
Total smartphone ownership. Comscore says that as of August, 43.7 percent of U.S. smartphone subscribers had an Android device; 27.7 percent had an iPhone. These figures don't include tablets (a category which the iPad utterly dominates) and smartphone-like media devices (a category in which the iPod Touch has almost no competition whatsoever).
Tablet sales. Research firm Strategy Analytics reported last month that the iPad had 66.6 percent of the tablet market and Android tablets had grown to 26.9 percent. But as Kevin C. Tofel of GigaOM noted, that mixes iPads that Apple has sold with Android tablets that have shipped from the manufacturer but may or may not have been bought by a consumer. If any of those Androids are sitting on store shelves, they shouldn't be compared against iPads that people have paid for and taken home.
In the world of smartphone operating systems, the biggest competitors are android and ios: the operating system for the iphone. The biggest difference between the two is simplicity. ios was made to be really simple, in fact the iphone and ipod only have one button. Ios does not allow the user to change much on the device. With the iphone or any other ios device, what you see is what you get. Theres not much tweaking you can do. However, android is open source, which means that you can find and customize almost anything on your android device including increasing your phones performance. You can even change your default browser. The only browser ios uses is safari. Android lets you use skyfire, opera, dolphin, and even firefox. You can also customize the screen by choosing from hundreds of widgets like clocks, weather updates, media player controls, or whatever else you want.
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