None of that was on Android before other OSes that arrived up to decades earlier. Your iOS-did-it-after-Android-therefore-Android-did-it-before-everyone-else is absurd logic.
As it's been noted ad nauseam pretty much everything in some general form comes to all other HW, SW and services before it Apple releases it. Apple, however, perfects it to a point that the UX is excellent before it releases it. This is why Apple wasn't the first with a fingerprint scanner or the first with cut/copy/paste or the first with a plethora of other poorly integrated fathers that only appeal to douchebags that like to masturbate to spec sheets.
I would much rather have Apple release something that's polished versus what you see on Android. Android releases features that are basically useless to give Fandroids a hard on over specs. Take for example LTE. Android phones had LTE first, but only a select few cities had LTE. When Apple updated their phones to LTE, it was around the country. Same thing with NFC. NFC has been pretty much useless until now. I'm sure Apple will add NFC to the next iPhone. I'm sure Fandroid's will say Apple is copying by allowing third party apps with TouchID. Apple's approach is better by polishing TouchID for a year before opening it up to third party apps. It's obvious Apple isn't in the spec war like competing Android devices. By polishing their offerings and not in a rush to release something just for specs like Android, Apple will always have superior competing features.
None of that was on Android before other OSes that arrived up to decades earlier. Your iOS-did-it-after-Android-therefore-Android-did-it-before-everyone-else is absurd logic.
Some form of notifications was present on other systems. Not as powerful though. AFAIK, Intents was unique to Android. I can't recall ever using any mobile system with as seamless interapp communication. i.e. search can display results which can take me to a map (another app), which can take me to navigate (another app). The default apps for each action can be replaced. And it's not launching different apps, but interspacing screens from different apps. Hitting the back button takes me back to the source app at the same state.
However, I do agree with the sentiment. All OSes stood on the shoulders of the preceding ones and adopted the best features of competing ones. And we are all richer for it as consumers. It's hypocrisy of stating otherwise that brings out these schadenfreude comments.
I would much rather have Apple release something that's polished versus what you see on Android. Android releases features that are basically useless to give Fandroids a hard on over specs. Take for example LTE. Android phones had LTE first, but only a select few cities had LTE. When Apple updated their phones to LTE, it was around the country. Same thing with NFC. NFC has been pretty much useless until now. I'm sure Apple will add NFC to the next iPhone. I'm sure Fandroid's will say Apple is copying by allowing third party apps with TouchID. Apple's approach is better by polishing TouchID for a year before opening it up to third party apps. It's obvious Apple isn't in the spec war like competing Android devices. By polishing their offerings and not in a rush to release something just for specs like Android, Apple will always have superior competing features.
LTE is still not everywhere. By that logic, iPhones should still not have had LTE. I use NFC every single day on my phone. I have two NFC tags - one at my bedside and one in my car and I use it to automate a series of tasks. In many countries people regularly use NFC for making purchases. Just because it's not widely done in the US, does not mean that the feature was rushed. It works perfectly right now.
I would much rather have Apple release something that's polished versus what you see on Android. Android releases features that are basically useless to give Fandroids a hard on over specs. Take for example LTE. Android phones had LTE first, but only a select few cities had LTE. When Apple updated their phones to LTE, it was around the country. Same thing with NFC. NFC has been pretty much useless until now. I'm sure Apple will add NFC to the next iPhone. I'm sure Fandroid's will say Apple is copying by allowing third party apps with TouchID. Apple's approach is better by polishing TouchID for a year before opening it up to third party apps. It's obvious Apple isn't in the spec war like competing Android devices. By polishing their offerings and not in a rush to release something just for specs like Android, Apple will always have superior competing features.
1) Don't forget that when Apple released an LTE iPhone the data usage time for '3G' and LTE was the same. They waited for the 3rd-gen chip.
2) This WWDC shows how Apple is inherently different from MS and Android. All these complex features have been designed to be so seamless that they seem simple. Most of these I've wanted for years but the logistics between bridging them across multiple OSes and devices, and syncing instantly and intuitively over the cloud was just not ready. What has Google done to make syngeries between Android and Chrome OS or anything else?
A very good development and about time! But like someone else mentioned here, Notification Centre already looks rather fussy and lacks the elegant simplicity of other parts of iOS. The whole interface needs to be cleaned up and rethought somewhat.
From my experience the logic always comes around to that everything was stolen from Apple. Always. Every time. Every product. Even unannounced ones. Even on features Apple never even had. It's all Apple. Apple invented fucking everything. Because it's Apple. Burning Apple juice running through our veins as we all power our souls with iOS and turn our vision into SceneKit. We power our brain with Swift and put on Beats headphones as we continue our trip through the road where every turn will lead us to Apple. Apple is love. Apple is life.
From my experience the logic always comes around to that everything was stolen from Apple. Always. Every time. Every product. Even unannounced ones. Even on features Apple never even had. It's all Apple. Apple invented fucking everything. Because it's Apple. Burning Apple juice running through our veins as we all power our souls with iOS and turn our vision into SceneKit. We power our brain with Swift and put on Beats headphones as we continue our trip through the road where every turn will lead us to Apple. Apple is love. Apple is life.
I love being on this side- you obviously have a lot of anger and inadequacy issues. Poor thing. It's more fun over here, trust me.
Considering they demoed it with Swiftkey directly on the screen... it"s obvious you weren't paying attention... as always.
Yes.... there will be 3rd Party keyboards available.
@Soli - and did you also miss when Craig said that the keyboards could be used "per-app" and with other functionality seriously limited, unless you choose to do otherwise (he mentioned contact access as an example).
They demoed Swiftkey? Where? They added Swiftkey style keyboard. That's essentially like the Google Keyboard (which also does swiping). I still prefer Swiftkey which has a good 3 years head start on Google and it shows. The Google keyboard is good enough. But Swiftkey is awesome.
Edit: I see that 3rd party keyboards are now finally allowed. That's truly great.
All Google Play and side loaded apps, the way we're constantly told around here that apps are so much better than the App Store because they aren't curated, are at risk because there is no method for keeping the user safe. Even Apple with their strict methodology has trouble keeping it secure because of the number of developers, apps, app updates, and infinite ways in which malicious code — by a developer — can be hid inside an app undetected. Your claims that there are no Android apps that aren't doing exactly what the customer expects of them is absolute fucking bullshit and you know it.
Even if you sideload apps they are still run through Google Play's server checks for malware the same way Google chrome checks downloads on your desktop computer. Why people bypass these warning messages is beyond me.
There are so, so, so few examples of these apps on Android and Apple in their respective App stores. I'm not saying it's 100% immune, it's just incredibly more secure than you're believing.
They demoed Swiftkey? Where? They added Swiftkey style keyboard. That's essentially like the Google Keyboard (which also does swiping). I still prefer Swiftkey which has a good 3 years head start on Google and it shows. The Google keyboard is good enough. But Swiftkey is awesome.
Apple DID open up Keyboards, "widgets" and sharing to 3rd party apps. Pretty remarkable change of heart from Apple and great news for iPhone users. It's a very similar implementation that Android had from day 1, and a feature that iOS users will quickly not be able to live without.
Is the file system now exposed to apps? I missed that. And you still can't use a 3rd party keyboard. The iOS8 keyboard is essentially the Google Keyboard (sans swiping), not the ability to replace it with a better keyboard (Swiftkey, KeePass Keyboard with userId/Password of selected entry, Swype, Minuum etc.)
I take that back. It looks like Apple has indeed enabled 3rd party keyboards. I just saw the QuickType predictive keyboard. Good for them.
Comments
None of that was on Android before other OSes that arrived up to decades earlier. Your iOS-did-it-after-Android-therefore-Android-did-it-before-everyone-else is absurd logic.
Gotta love that crazy absurd logic.
As it's been noted ad nauseam pretty much everything in some general form comes to all other HW, SW and services before it Apple releases it. Apple, however, perfects it to a point that the UX is excellent before it releases it. This is why Apple wasn't the first with a fingerprint scanner or the first with cut/copy/paste or the first with a plethora of other poorly integrated fathers that only appeal to douchebags that like to masturbate to spec sheets.
I would much rather have Apple release something that's polished versus what you see on Android. Android releases features that are basically useless to give Fandroids a hard on over specs. Take for example LTE. Android phones had LTE first, but only a select few cities had LTE. When Apple updated their phones to LTE, it was around the country. Same thing with NFC. NFC has been pretty much useless until now. I'm sure Apple will add NFC to the next iPhone. I'm sure Fandroid's will say Apple is copying by allowing third party apps with TouchID. Apple's approach is better by polishing TouchID for a year before opening it up to third party apps. It's obvious Apple isn't in the spec war like competing Android devices. By polishing their offerings and not in a rush to release something just for specs like Android, Apple will always have superior competing features.
None of that was on Android before other OSes that arrived up to decades earlier. Your iOS-did-it-after-Android-therefore-Android-did-it-before-everyone-else is absurd logic.
Some form of notifications was present on other systems. Not as powerful though. AFAIK, Intents was unique to Android. I can't recall ever using any mobile system with as seamless interapp communication. i.e. search can display results which can take me to a map (another app), which can take me to navigate (another app). The default apps for each action can be replaced. And it's not launching different apps, but interspacing screens from different apps. Hitting the back button takes me back to the source app at the same state.
However, I do agree with the sentiment. All OSes stood on the shoulders of the preceding ones and adopted the best features of competing ones. And we are all richer for it as consumers. It's hypocrisy of stating otherwise that brings out these schadenfreude comments.
My sentiments are the same. I'll take the the opportunity to say "best" over the opportunity to say "first", any day.
I would much rather have Apple release something that's polished versus what you see on Android. Android releases features that are basically useless to give Fandroids a hard on over specs. Take for example LTE. Android phones had LTE first, but only a select few cities had LTE. When Apple updated their phones to LTE, it was around the country. Same thing with NFC. NFC has been pretty much useless until now. I'm sure Apple will add NFC to the next iPhone. I'm sure Fandroid's will say Apple is copying by allowing third party apps with TouchID. Apple's approach is better by polishing TouchID for a year before opening it up to third party apps. It's obvious Apple isn't in the spec war like competing Android devices. By polishing their offerings and not in a rush to release something just for specs like Android, Apple will always have superior competing features.
LTE is still not everywhere. By that logic, iPhones should still not have had LTE. I use NFC every single day on my phone. I have two NFC tags - one at my bedside and one in my car and I use it to automate a series of tasks. In many countries people regularly use NFC for making purchases. Just because it's not widely done in the US, does not mean that the feature was rushed. It works perfectly right now.
1) Don't forget that when Apple released an LTE iPhone the data usage time for '3G' and LTE was the same. They waited for the 3rd-gen chip.
2) This WWDC shows how Apple is inherently different from MS and Android. All these complex features have been designed to be so seamless that they seem simple. Most of these I've wanted for years but the logistics between bridging them across multiple OSes and devices, and syncing instantly and intuitively over the cloud was just not ready. What has Google done to make syngeries between Android and Chrome OS or anything else?
Gotta love that crazy absurd logic.
From my experience the logic always comes around to that everything was stolen from Apple. Always. Every time. Every product. Even unannounced ones. Even on features Apple never even had. It's all Apple. Apple invented fucking everything. Because it's Apple. Burning Apple juice running through our veins as we all power our souls with iOS and turn our vision into SceneKit. We power our brain with Swift and put on Beats headphones as we continue our trip through the road where every turn will lead us to Apple. Apple is love. Apple is life.
What has Google down to make syngeries between Android and Chrome OS or anything else?
" src="http://forums-files.appleinsider.com/images/smilies//lol.gif" /> ouch... my sides hurt.. stop!
From my experience the logic always comes around to that everything was stolen from Apple. Always. Every time. Every product. Even unannounced ones. Even on features Apple never even had. It's all Apple. Apple invented fucking everything. Because it's Apple. Burning Apple juice running through our veins as we all power our souls with iOS and turn our vision into SceneKit. We power our brain with Swift and put on Beats headphones as we continue our trip through the road where every turn will lead us to Apple. Apple is love. Apple is life.
I love being on this side- you obviously have a lot of anger and inadequacy issues. Poor thing. It's more fun over here, trust me.
Considering they demoed it with Swiftkey directly on the screen... it"s obvious you weren't paying attention... as always.
Yes.... there will be 3rd Party keyboards available.
@Soli - and did you also miss when Craig said that the keyboards could be used "per-app" and with other functionality seriously limited, unless you choose to do otherwise (he mentioned contact access as an example).
They demoed Swiftkey? Where? They added Swiftkey style keyboard. That's essentially like the Google Keyboard (which also does swiping). I still prefer Swiftkey which has a good 3 years head start on Google and it shows. The Google keyboard is good enough. But Swiftkey is awesome.
Edit: I see that 3rd party keyboards are now finally allowed. That's truly great.
I love being on this side- you obviously have a lot of anger and inadequacy issues. Poor thing. It's more fun over here, trust me.
I have been on every side of the border and Apple fans are the craziest ones.
All Google Play and side loaded apps, the way we're constantly told around here that apps are so much better than the App Store because they aren't curated, are at risk because there is no method for keeping the user safe. Even Apple with their strict methodology has trouble keeping it secure because of the number of developers, apps, app updates, and infinite ways in which malicious code — by a developer — can be hid inside an app undetected. Your claims that there are no Android apps that aren't doing exactly what the customer expects of them is absolute fucking bullshit and you know it.
Even if you sideload apps they are still run through Google Play's server checks for malware the same way Google chrome checks downloads on your desktop computer. Why people bypass these warning messages is beyond me.
There are so, so, so few examples of these apps on Android and Apple in their respective App stores. I'm not saying it's 100% immune, it's just incredibly more secure than you're believing.
Surprise surprise the trolls and Fandroids show up. What are you all going to do when people switch back to iOS because of some of these features?
"There is only one thing in life worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about." - Oscar Wilde
When Apple sneezes, everyone runs for a Kleenex.
You forgot Newton (of course you did).
They demoed Swiftkey? Where? They added Swiftkey style keyboard. That's essentially like the Google Keyboard (which also does swiping). I still prefer Swiftkey which has a good 3 years head start on Google and it shows. The Google keyboard is good enough. But Swiftkey is awesome.
Apple DID open up Keyboards, "widgets" and sharing to 3rd party apps. Pretty remarkable change of heart from Apple and great news for iPhone users. It's a very similar implementation that Android had from day 1, and a feature that iOS users will quickly not be able to live without.
I see the Fandroid Defense Force has been mobilized and deployed to AppleInsider. Nice work GoogBots!
*looks at his iPad*
*looks at his Surface*
*looks at his Lumia*
Right.
*looks at his iPad*
*looks at his Surface*
*looks at his Lumia*
Right.
DaHarder, is that you?
Is the file system now exposed to apps? I missed that. And you still can't use a 3rd party keyboard. The iOS8 keyboard is essentially the Google Keyboard (sans swiping), not the ability to replace it with a better keyboard (Swiftkey, KeePass Keyboard with userId/Password of selected entry, Swype, Minuum etc.)
I take that back. It looks like Apple has indeed enabled 3rd party keyboards. I just saw the QuickType predictive keyboard. Good for them.