Communication: iPhone vs Android
By admin on Nov 20, 2007 in Pure Marketing, Technology, Video
Don’t get me wrong: I love both Apple and Google. All these guys do an amazing job in making our technology experience more fun and performing and probably Android will turn out to be an amazing product as the iPhone is. But when it comes to communication, Mountain View disappears and Cupertino rules. The guys at Google simply seem to be still stuck in the web 1.0 of communication. See for yourself:
Android presentation:
iPhone (still need to see it?!):













..see for yourself…
So I watched these two videos to see the difference between Google’s ’stuck in the web 1.0′ and apples’ Iphone. The first video shows some reallly impressive ‘web 2.0′. The second video shows ‘nothing but hype’. Who are you posting this? An Apple Cult fanatic? I’sm not saying Google is better than Apple, I’m asking: ‘Where’s the beef?’ You have compared Google’s evidence-based vid against some riduculous hype session fronted by Steve Jobs. Come On!
Anonymous | Jan 30, 2008 | Reply
I would have to say I really liked Android. Not the touchscreen version, it probably won’t ever be good because apple patented the multi-touch technology. The first version he showed however seemed great. Much better than the iPhone. The iPhone has many flaws itself.
Andrew | Jan 30, 2008 | Reply
In response to Riley’s summary:
Sure, Brin might look wooden, but he doesn’t talk like some kind of prophet. Has there ever been a time where Jobs just explains the product, and lets the consumer decide its worth, rather than proclaiming like a holy grail?
Carson Brown | Jan 30, 2008 | Reply
Android looks great. Really impresses me. Unlike the iPhone.
For one I can still use keys. Touch screen only phones seems stupid to me.
Also the fact that it’s open source and I won’t be locked into only Apple’s apps.
Can’t wait for the part of Android that will probably play every video , image, and website you throw at it thanks to the open source community
Famf | Jan 30, 2008 | Reply