I have neither myself. I use an old phone with a black and white screen that has a contact book and makes calls so I am blissfully not opinionated.
I like that there are different platforms taking different approaches. If Apple wants to approve apps and 'manage' the market, centrally plan away. If Google wants to direct an open system, go ahead. The approaches can compete, that way whatever works lasts and we might have several open or several closed platforms. If they both make it, it probably means they serve different markets. Also good.
At the end of the day, both are far from a monopoly that can dictate anything. Consumers are opting for the Apple system.
I guess eventually most phones will be 'smart' and as long as Apple don't make most of them, I'm not worried.
I have neither myself. I use an old phone with a black and white screen that has a contact book and makes calls so I am blissfully not opinionated.
I like that there are different platforms taking different approaches. If Apple wants to approve apps and 'manage' the market, centrally plan away. If Google wants to direct an open system, go ahead. The approaches can compete, that way whatever works lasts and we might have several open or several closed platforms. If they both make it, it probably means they serve different markets. Also good.
At the end of the day, both are far from a monopoly that can dictate anything. Consumers are opting for the Apple system.
I guess eventually most phones will be 'smart' and as long as Apple don't make most of them, I'm not worried.