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gw99 | 3 years ago

The scary thing is it's the least bad option when it comes to overall reliability.

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codalan|3 years ago

I think it depends on the phone.

The Google Pixel series seems pretty solid for reliability. I have a Pixel 7 Pro and it's been really good so far in terms of software and build quality. I strongly prefer it to my iPhone 13 Pro, which I'm currently selling off.

But iPhone vs Samsung Galaxy? iPhone wins by a mile. I never got used to the custom interface Samsung loaded onto those phones, and hated that it included Samsung-specific apps that just duplicated those already available by default on stock Android.

JamesonNetworks|3 years ago

Pixels had a defect where emergency calls didnt work with MS teams installed. Both platforms wither under the lights

gw99|3 years ago

I have an iPhone 13 Pro. I found that Android is almost a brick the moment you lose an Internet connection where as the iPhone is still productive and I can do stuff offline and it'll sync everything later no problems.

That is a complete dealbreaker for me for Android. Also, Google.

gtvwill|3 years ago

Ooo that's a big depends on the situation. Making only phone calls. Sure iPhones are great. Running LOB apps. Lol have fun passing that crap through apples store. Androids way easier for LOB.

Remote MDM? Lol nightmare using apples gear. Warranty services? Also a nightmare. Fleet level warranty support? Ahahhahhaha have fun paying folks like IBM out the kazoo. No thanks.

iPhones are rock solid if you played w Fischer price toys as a kid and only ever plan to be on the public consumer end of the game, making calls and using apps someone else has decided are ok for you. Go up the line to fleet rollout or bulk purchasing/warranty work or running custom line of business apps. Ahahhahhaha have fun w apple I've done the work when I was w/ ibm, I refuse to touch it these days.

plugin-baby|3 years ago

What are LOB and MDM?