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You missed the point of having choices that Apple never gives users
(mainly because there are few companies as anti-consumer as Apple is).
Since the rest of the Industry (well, 95%) has adopted the same design
choice, it really isn't as tyrannical of Apple as you're trying to make
it out to be. It is more indicative of Apple appropriately identifying
a "where the puck is going to be".
It would take
some more research to determine if these holdouts are actually still in
production (and for what market segment) or if they're now down to "New
Old Stock" that's still available for sale.
Those were phones on sale at the time that the search was run.
I'm aware of that. Now go back and check to see how many of those were
actually --> still in production <-- versus being obsolete stock that
was merely still available for sale.
What's relevant is if you're on Android & you want an sd card or an aux
jack or an FM radio, you can extremely easily find a model today with them,
(since about half of Android phones sold today have one or more of them).
Incorrect, because your claim also means ~half have none of these
features too. And what have all three? Probably just a tiny fraction.
Once again, you're just not being successful in identifying if any of
these product feature are integral to product success in the, to
demonstrate if Apple's disinclination towards them is "anti-consumer".
Indeed, if they were as much of a "pro consumer" differentiator as
you're trying to imply, then the fraction of Androids which featured all
three should be quite large. It isn't.
Unfortunately, it also means that if you want a user-removable battery,
then your choices are severely limited.
But it also shows Android hardware is always better than iPhone hardware
(because Apple gives you no choice for any of those 4 hardware features).
But 95% of Android doesn't offer that choice either, so that feature is
simply not an indicator. Especially since you've not been able to show
if the 5% residual is actually still in production, as opposed to left
over inventory.
>>And the software that drops support after a few years.>
The full software support for Android is far better than iOS for a
variety
of reasons which the Apple zealots would never be able to comprehend.
No... ...it's really not.
This doesn't actually matter, because fundamentally, its not a profound
statement: by literal definition as per set theory, no subset of a
whole can ever be greater than the whole from which it was a subset.
Au contraire... given Apple's hotfix support is the worst in the industry,
you're only saying bugfix support isn't important because it's not there.
Just what is "hotfix" supposed to mean here? And why is it now being
introduced as a new Goalpost?
I've not read the fine print because I'm not a fanboy, nor have I everAs such, just what does 'full software support' really mean?
It's no longer shocking you didn't read Apple's own definition of full
support, given you Apple religious zealots not only know nothing of Apple
products - but you "think" you know everything about Android & iOS.
had any issues or troubles from their current & historical level of
product support: I'm predominantly going by what you've tried to brag
about, which I see as evidence of Android/Google trying to catch up.
Its only
of value if every Android smartphone sold is capable of using the 'full'
breadth of this software set (which is dang near impossible) and then
also only if this 'full' set is materially different (better) than
software sets from other providers (eg, Apple iOS).
Idiot. You're making lame excuses for Apple only patching all the bugs it
knows about in only the latest iOS or mac release - which are dumb excuses.
How can any software developer patch bugs that they don't know about?
Or are you trying to criticize the entire industry for their practice of
sun-setting support on old obsolete & superseded software that's if its
used by anyone at all, its <0.0001% of the installed base?
If so, show us the dates of the latest bug & security updates for
Android OS versions 1 (2008) through 6 (2015): I'm sure that there's
been zero for the past five years, if not longer.
Apple's bugfix support for operating systems is the worst in the industry.
Unsubstantiated claim. Golly, how about that.
Plus the Law of
Diminishing Returns applies too: just because something is "N+1" larger
doesn't mean that the "+1" increment is also significant. To use a
analogy, $10,000,001 is pedantically "more money" than $10,000,000, but
that extra dollar doesn't make this difference be significant.
You didn't even read Apple's own explanation that they never patch all the
hole in operating systems that they know exist - except the latest OS only.
You're correct that I didn't bother to read that, because all that one
has to do to mitigate whatever theoretical risk you're concerned about
is just to maintain one's equipment to the latest OS. Since MacOS and
iOS updates from Apple are free of charge, there's few reasons not to.
Apple has mostly supported it's phones for longer than Samsung OR Google.>
Yes, that's been their track record history.
Apple's operating system support has _always_ been the worst in the
industry. The only reason you don't know that is you don't know what Apple
says about Apple NOT PATCHING all known bugs in any release but the latest.
Unsubstantiated claim. Again. Golly, how about that.
See references in the sig since I speak facts about Apple & Android.
No need to, as you clearly don't sufficiently understand the industry.
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