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Why
people switch
In a survey conducted by Yahoo
Finance, 38% of 853 former Apple users cited price as the key factor for
leaving the platform, followed by Android’s software features and customization
of the platform.
Unlike Apple, known for its “walled
garden” strategy, Android has flexibility that, while less beautiful to some,
can allow for a unique user experience. Others cited battery replacement, which
is difficult (but possible)
on an iPhone.
Here are some other less popular but
interesting reasons for switching, according to other Yahoo Finance readers
surveyed: Project Fi,
Google’s foray into providing service, which is simple, affordable,
internationally friendly, but iPhone-free; Apple’s politics, lack of
innovation; and gripes about the headphone jack, which Apple ditched
during its last upgrade.
The
pain points of the switch
Whatever the reason, the switch
itself is not difficult, though it might feel like a massive task to migrate
your digital life to a new platform. In our survey, 77% of respondents said it
was “easy,” and an additional 15% said it was “somewhat easy.”
“The
switch was simple. I was completely comfortable with Android after about one
month,” Bennet Alexander, a former iPhoner, told Yahoo Finance. “I travel
overseas frequently and the biggest issue/complaint I have is the lack of
iMessage functionality on Android.”
Apple’s proprietary SMS alternative,
iMessage, effectively excludes a majority of the population that uses Android
from special message functionality and makes group texts harder. Android
texts — which are still SMS — also turn from normal blue in iMessage to
green on iPhone screens, like a badge of shame. (“Green with envy,” people
joke.) Apple similarly excludes Android users from FaceTime, Apple’s popular
video chat program.
Sometimes people may flock to a
third-party program like WhatsApp that offers some of the highest levels of
security, the international omni-platform ubiquity of SMS, and an ability to
use it on a computer as well.
Google’s
ubiquity really makes things easier
A Google account is often a common
ground between Apple and Android users, and it makes the switch much easier.
Many Apple users already use Google Calendar, which is linked to email (often, gmail). It’s the same, though
perhaps to a lesser degree, with Google Hangouts, which can provide the video
chatting capabilities to both types of phones, supplanting FaceTime.
On the app side, most app developers
have an Android version, making those switches less of an issue past installing
them all on a new phone. Still, at times Android does play second fiddle
to the Apple version in terms of updates and new features.
But besides a few small issues, most
people reported “nothing” was hard about the switch. We rely on phones to an
incredible degree, so any change may feel jarring — but the operating systems
are not worlds apart.
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