5 comments
Join the conversation!Add your comment (Log in or register)
5 comments
Join the conversation!Add your comment (Log in or register)

What I’m about to attempt–comparing Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich with Apple iOS 5–is a little like tiptoeing through a minefield. Most of you won’t be happy and somebody could get hurt. (Read: me.)
Yet, this comparison must be done. For one thing, Google and Apple have both recently unveiled huge changes that respectively make their mobile operating systems far more powerful, and in some ways more similar to each other. For another thing, weighing the pros and cons of each platform against the other is a scenario that’s played out daily among many people who are deciding which phone to buy.
Just a few parameters before diving in. First, I’m overwhelmingly looking at software, not hardware, but I’ll point out where hardware does factor in. iOS 5 runs on multiple devices, but is the most powerful right now on the
iPhone 4S. Ditto Ice Cream Sandwich. The unreleased Samsung Galaxy Nexus is the one phone that can currently show off the OS update’s full spectrum of features, since it was purpose-built to be compatible with them all. That will change for both operating systems as additional future devices are built with the hardware to support the new software.
Second, I’m not just talking about new additions, but trying to look at the OS in its entirety.
Third, I’m looking at what each OS can do natively. Yes, there are scores of third-party apps you can download to do just about anything to satisfy something that one OS lacks that another has, but what we’re looking at here is what Apple and Google have decided to bestow, not clever external developers. And I’m not talking about anything you can achieve only by jailbreaking or rooting. Official, but optional apps created by Apple and Google are OK–like Find My Friends and Google Voice.
Third, I’m throwing in two “fun” features for each (these will be the last two). I wouldn’t recommend buying an iOS 5 or Ice Cream Sandwich device solely because of them, but they’re pleasantly show-offy conversation pieces unique to each platform.
Got all that? Let’s go.
ICE CREAM SANDWICH
Bold, powerful UI
For those who already use it, there’s nothing hard about
Android. Yeah, you have to know that sometimes you need to access the menu or long press for more options, and there are some extras you can get by swiping in certain places on the screen. But no other major OS can top Android’s flexibility in terms of customizing the multiple home screens with stills or moving animations; widgets galore; and apps, apps, and more apps. Ice Cream Sandwich ups the ante by making widgets resizable, too.
And iOS 5?: Apple takes the opposite philosophy and opts for simplicity. There’s customization in arranging apps the way you want them and in choosing which items you want in your notifications pull-down and how you take your notifications in general.
Turn-by-turn voice navigation
For many people, this is the platform’s ace-in-the-hole. Broken out from maps, Google’s turn-by-turn voice navigation for driving directions can effectively replace your in-car dash or GPS navigator–and possibly save you hundreds of dollars.
And iOS 5?: Integrated Google maps are great, but there’s no voice readout.
Google services
After logging in with your Google account, the instant account-based access you get to Gmail, Google Maps, the contacts, the calendar, Latitude, and chat are great. I personally rely on Google Voice as well.
And iOS 5?: Gmail is integrated into iOS, you can sync the calendar as well, and Google maps are a de-facto part of the OS (minus voice navigation.) You can download Google apps from the App Store, too. The Google Voice app has a better layout for iOS, in my daily experience, but it’s also slower and much less stable.
You can still use third-party apps to edit; but you won’t need to.
(Credit:
Google)
Camera tools
Ice Cream Sandwich brings on a whole lot of new photo tools, the most significant of which are the photo-editing tools in the image gallery. They include red-eye reduction, straightening, and “hipster filters,” whatever those are. The camera app itself adds a useful panorama mode that seamlessly creates a landscape still.
And iOS 5?: Here’s one of those places where it’s hard to separate the software from the hardware because iOS 5 has great software image rendering, but photo quality also requires the image sensor and camera lens. The app itself lets you switch between the camera and camcorder modes, and between the front and rear cameras. You can adjust the flash level and turn on a grid or HDR mode, but that’s about it. In the camera roll, you can create a slideshow, plus crop, rotate, remove red-eye, and auto-enhance, but from the looks of it Ice Cream Sandwich will have more features. We’ll know more about those and their quality soon.
NFC
This won’t appeal to everyone right now, but NFC (near-field communications) is becoming a big deal in mobile. If you have an NFC-compatible phone (this is where hardware comes in), you’ll be able to use the on-board Google Wallet software right away to pay for purchases by tapping or waving your phone near a compatible terminal (MasterCard users can get going.)
Yes, there are still a lot of requirements, and Android isn’t the only NFC-capable OS (Windows Mobile, BlackBerry, and Symbian already support it). But Google’s partnerships and software put it in a good position to be immediately useful as the technology ramps up in the U.S.
And iOS 5?: No NFC for iOS 5 yet; it’s one of the features we were collectively hoping to see in the update.
Want to unlock that phone? Smile.
(Credit:
Google)
Openness
The benefit Android’s openness to other manufacturers’ custom interface designs is debatable depending on which side of the conversation you’re on, but it gives cell phone-makers and carriers the opportunity to offer new features and visual experiences that are variations on the Android theme.
Some people prefer stock Android, just as Google designed it. Others appreciate accessing tools and information in ways that Google didn’t envision. The company has clearly borrowed some innovations from these custom UIs, like bring able to open a specific app in conjunction with unlocking the phone (rather than unlcoking to the hom page, then opening your app.)
And iOS 5?: iOS is a famously closed ecosystem, and whether you love it or hate it is a matter of personal opinion. There’s also something to be said for uniformity in terms of your expectations of how a phone will behave, and in offering consistent customer support.
Facial unlocking
Android Beam is fun too, but I think facial unlocking is even more novel, fun, and interactive because it (optionally) uses the front-facing camera to recognize your features and let your into your phone. So smile! It’s also wholly unnecessary, but a harmless party trick.
And iOS 5?: It’ll be the boring power-swipe combo for
iPhone, every time.
Android Beam
Right now the Samsung Galaxy Nexus will be the only compatible device, but put two of them together and they can transfer content like contact information, maps, and details of running apps (the app you’ve got open will trigger your friend’s phone to open the product page for that app in the Android Market.
And iOS 5?: The closest you can get is a third-party app, but this isn’t native.
iOS 5
And Ice Cream Sandwich?: The app tray isn’t front and center, the menu system can add a layer of complexity, and there’s a bit of a higher learning curve to take advantage of all you can do. The uncurious may overlook some of Android’s customization options because they don’t know how to find them.
Music integration
From the very beginning, iTunes and iPod integration is what made the iPhone a killer. It’s simple to store, play, and buy music. iOS 5′s wireless syncing forgoes the need to plug your iPhone into the computer to sync songs. Now, as long as it’s charging while you’re connected to Wi-Fi, you can set it to automatically sync with iTunes.
And Ice Cream Sandwich?: Android borrowed iPhone’s strengths as a music player, but the Android showing is so far slim, and it’s closest feature, Google Music, is still a rough beta that’s very much in development.
Camera
As I mentioned above, this one’s stickier because there’s no way to completely separate the hardware and software. The camera app interface in iOS 5 is simple to operate, and not very deep, but there’s great editing software behind the scenes that help photos render with crisp detail and good color representation, even on an iPhone 4 running iOS 5. HDR mode is a nice plus. However, the camera’s lens and image sensor qualities also play a significant part in the making of good mobile photography.
And Ice Cream Sandwich?: The OS has a much richer feature set than iOS, with photo-editing software and panorama mode built in. However, the photo components that each manufacturer uses for their armies of Android handsets will cause the image quality to vary from Android 4.0 phone to phone.
App Store
No OS can boast more apps than iOS’ more than half a million. Not all are good, it’s true, but Apple blew the app store concept wide open and everyone else scrambled to follow.
And Ice Cream Sandwich?: Android may have the second-largest app store, at over 250,000 titles; that’s half the size of the iOS storefront.
iMessage in iOS 5
(Credit:
CBS Interactive)
iMessage
BlackBerry may have pioneered in-ecosystem messaging with Blackberry Messenger (a.k.a. BBM), but Apple has succeeded in making it a seamless part of the messaging app. The phone will automatically switch between iMessage and a text message when it detects that the other user is also on iOS 5. Translation: it won’t count against your texting plan, so more texts for you.
Giving credit where it’s due, Windows Phone got to the IM/text convention with its “Mango” update before iOS 5 launched, and Mango taps into Windows Live Messenger and Facebook chat.
And Ice Cream Sandwich?: Google Talk is a separate app that’s preloaded into Android, but which is separate from the texting app.
iCloud
One of iOS 5′s most significant additions, iCloud does over-the-air syncing from the device to the cloud (no more USB connection to the computer!) and syncs content like apps, music, and contacts, so you can later restore. You can also wirelessly edit photos, manage e-mail folders, and create and delete calendars. iCloud is an excellent resource for syncing music you own.
And Ice Cream Sandwich?: Android has long enjoyed over-the-air OS updates, and its online Android Market also takes advantage of over-the-air app installation. Google Music is one big cloud feature, but as I mentioned above, it’s still too rough around the edges to really be a killer feature (give it time though).
Siri
Probably iOS 5′s most buzzed-about feature, Siri is the voice-triggered assistant with an attitude that replaces the Voice Control app. She’s fun to talk to the way you would converse with another person, and comes up with some snarky responses to some inquiries that make her the talk of the town.
Much like before with voice commands, Siri can create reminders, search for directions, text people, call you a cab, and so on. The real innovation is the flexibility in which you can phrase your questions, like: “Do I need an umbrella today” rather than “Weather San Francisco.” Ultimately, the shot of personality is fun, but the abilities aren’t substantially different than what’s already out there. Besides, like all voice command apps, Siri’s comprehension ain’t flawless.
And Ice Cream Sandwich?: Android has also had its own voice actions app, which can launch navigation, calls, texts, search, and more, at your command. It lacks Siri’s “personality.”
FaceTime
If all the people you want to talk to have iPhones on Wi-Fi, FaceTime is great. The in-ecosystem video chat app won’t make you look your best through that front-facing camera, but it does work without taking away from your minutes, and it’s a neat addition besides. FaceTime is hardly innovative–mobile video chats through front-facing cameras existed long before.
And Ice Cream Sandwich?: Thanks to Google+ (a downloadable app at this point,) there’s video chat through Hangouts.
COLLISION COURSE?
FaceTime
(Credit:
Apple)
With iOS 5 and Ice Cream Sandwich, we see each operating system borrow more heavily from each other and from other competitors. That means that consumers will see their smartphones growing evermore powerful, and their choices for great smartphone ecosystems grow too. It’s less heartening news for platform-makers, who need to advance their offerings to stay ahead and therefore relevant.
Is it only a matter of time before these platforms and other converge? In some senses yes, but what Apple and Google have both demonstrated is an ability to keep pushing the envelope to add their own special touch–for example with iOS’s Siri and Ice Cream Sandwich’s facial unlocking. Whichever mobile ecosystem of the spread you personally prefer is a matter of personal opinion, and a reflection of the features or philosophy you value most.
At the end of the day, that’s a decision you have to make and defend on your own. But when it comes to which OS does one thing better than the other, it’s sometimes a little more clear-cut, but neither one here lacks for compelling reasons to jump on their gravy train. And that’s good news for everyone.
Article updated 10/20/11 at 6:03pm PT: To correction about Android’s video features and iOS 5′s camera-editing tools.
Gmail’s new look is designed to be cleaner and more intuitive.
(Credit:Screenshot by Steven Musil/CNET)
Google is about to give your Gmail inbox a makeover.
A YouTube video leaked on to the Web (subsequently deleted but since reposted) shows off the new interface for the Web giant’s e-mail service. Jason Cornwell, a user experience designer for Gmail, walks viewers through the major changes ahead.
A Google representative confirmed the video’s authenticity but declined to provide further details.
“Oops, you weren’t supposed to see that,” Google representative Andrea Freund told CNET. “Stay tuned, we’ll be sharing more info on Gmail’s new look soon.”
The new look is designed to be cleaner, simpler, and more intuitive, he said. Plasma TVs . One of the biggest changes is that the Gmail window will automatically adapt to whatever size the user chooses.
Gmail is adding user’s profile pictures “to make chats “feel more like a real conversation.”
Conversations have been redesigned to “feel more like a real conversation,” he said, noting that user profile pictures have been added next to their comments, similar to how many instant messaging and chat applications work.
Google is making the size of the label and chat areas on the left more flexible, he said. “Even if you do nothing, Gmail adapts to you,” he said. Gmail has also overhauled search to make it more customizable.
The new Gmail will include hig-resolution themes that users can add to their window.
(Credit:Screenshot by Steven Musil/CNET)
Google has also updated Gmail themes for user’s windows with high-resolution images such as sunsets, grass, and stones.
The changes, which Google gave us a sneak peek of in June, will be rolled out incrementally over the next few months “to allow plenty of time to understand and incorporate your feedback into the evolving design,” Cornwell said.
In addition to the Gmail changes coming soon, Google will be introducing a brand-new design for its Reader app that integrates Google+ social features.

Android has ruled the U.S. smartphone market share for months and months now, and based on a new report, Google’s mobile OS will only continue to grow stronger.
But that could be helped in part by a factor that still proves to be a barrier for some consumers when it comes to smartphones: pricing.
A new report from market intelligence firm In-Stat asserts that 339 million low-cost
Android smartphones will ship worldwide in 2015. Low-cost is defined at $150 and under. Right now, most smartphones start at $199 with the signing of a two-year service agreement.
The group argues that mobile phone consumers only have one choice for a mobile operating system in this budget-friendly category, and that would be Android. As Ice Cream Sandwich and further (and better) versions of Android OS roll out in the future, older versions can still be made useful.
In-Stat research director Allen Nogee explained in a statement:
The low-cost Android handset segment will cause some fragmentation in the Android platform. Most low-cost Android smartphones are likely to be released with Android 2.2 or 2.3, since these versions are a good blend of features with modest memory and processor usage. The Ice Cream Sandwich (Android 4.0) step-up in memory and processor demands makes this release less attractive for low-cost Android devices.
However, that argument could certainly be applied to other mobile platforms. Just look at the
iPhone 3GS. That device is selling for free with a two-year contract, and the
iPhone 4 now retails for $99 on-contract, which is an incredible steal if you can settle for 8GB of space and don’t care about Siri.
In-Stat also acknowledges that this particular smartphone market is Android’s to lose as this space “could get much more competitive, especially as other OS vendors begin to target the space.” The study cites Huawei, MicroMax, Motorola, Samsung, Spice, and ZTE as potential competitors, mainly because these low-cost devices will be built to at 600MHz speeds or less with a single-core EDGE chip that costs less than $10.
At least that’s the idea for the short-term. By 2015, the price points on smartphones and the materials that go in them could be drastically different. After all, if an iPhone 4S can be made for $188 apiece now, smartphone parts could be very well much cheaper in the next few years.
This post first appeared on ZDNet’s Between the Lines blog.
Steve Jobs felt that
Android was a rip-off of Apple’s iOS and wasn’t going to settle any lawsuits with Google or its partners no matter what.
As details emerge from Walter Isaacson biography on Jobs–the Apple co-founder’s decision to put off cancer surgery–his hatred of Android may be overlooked. Isaacson’s bio launches on Monday and he will detail some of the book Sunday on 60 Minutes. The Jobs biography is published by Simon Shuster, a unit of CBS, owner of CNET.
The Associated Press details Jobs’ view of Android and his relationship with former Google CEO Eric Schmidt. Schmidt was on Apple’s board, but resigned after Android lost. Jobs felt betrayed. According to AP Jobs said:
“I will spend my last dying breath if I need to, and I will spend every penny of Apple’s $40 billion in the bank, to right this wrong. I’m going to destroy Android, because it’s a stolen product. I’m willing to go thermonuclear war on this.”
It’s worth noting that Apple has more than twice the cash hoard since that Jobs quote. Meanwhile, there are no signs that Apple will back off its Android lawsuits.
Jobs made it clear he wouldn’t settle for any amount of money. AP’s Michael Liedtke tweeted some choice Android excerpts.

The comments shed light on Apple’s series of lawsuits against HTC, Samsung and others over Android. The big question is whether these lawsuits will be settled under Apple CEO Tim Cook.
This story was originally published at ZDNet’s Between the Lines.
©2011-2012 Cambridgeshire Web Design - Affordable Website Design in Cambridgeshire | Powered by WordPress with Easel | Subscribe: RSS | Back to Top ↑
Comments 1-5 of 5
I still have the original at home. It was a huge improvement over the huge Archos player of the time, or the small flash capacity RIO players.
What I’m waiting for is the 10th Anniversary, Steve Jobs Memorial Nano, dressed in Black, of course. With an etching of the Apple logo with Steve Jobs face in the Apple, designed by that Japanese teen.
Posted by mike.gw
(470
comments
)
October 20, 2011 4:42 PM (PDT)Like
Reply
Link
Flag
E-mail
Neat retrospective. I wonder, do people still walk around listening to music?
Posted by DocPaul1
(14
comments
)
October 20, 2011 5:19 PM (PDT)Like
Reply
Link
Flag
E-mail
I still have my 5th Gen iPod video and love it. =)
Posted by nauj_solrac
(1197
comments
)
October 20, 2011 8:37 PM (PDT)Like
Reply
Link
Flag
E-mail
Interesting that the article misses two iterations of the iPod nano – 2nd (different color options) and 3rd (short and stout form factor).
Posted by sssmaga
(8
comments
)
October 20, 2011 9:46 PM (PDT)Like
Reply
Link
Flag
E-mail
I’ve only had 1 ipod: the 5th generation with video. After 6 months the battery couldnt last an hour and the headphone jack wasnt working. But when I took it to the Apple store they told me such things werent covered under the 1 year warrenty and I shouldve bought Apple Care. That was the last time I bought an over priced piece of junk.
Posted by arcana1973
(17
comments
)
October 20, 2011 11:19 PM (PDT)Like
Reply
Link
Flag
E-mail
Comments 1-5 of 5