I personally prefer iOS but Android is on a much more interesting trajectory technically, building in desktop mode, x86 emulation and virtualization have some really exciting possibilities. There's videos on YouTube of Android phones running Steam and Windows games, this stuff will be on par with a Steam Deck soon enough.
I don't think there's anything to be excited about with the future of iOS, just more of the same for as long as regulators can be kept at bay. Maybe even sillier if the rumours are true the folding iPhone is blocked from running iPad apps lol.
Hopefully Ternus will be less uptight about ancient iOS restrictions, I want my iPhone to be every bit as useful as a MacBook Neo if I connect a monitor/mouse/keyboard.
I would say its pure preference at this point. Both operating systems have converged towards each other in the last few years, where nowadays it really just comes down to your taste, the ecosystem you are in (or want to be in - ), and whether you value having potentially a bit more freedom (with some devices that make it easier to flash custom ROMs/Kernels).
What should be mentioned though: Android is not anymore as tinker-friendly as it was 5 years ago, a lot of OEMs make it hard to even unlock your bootloader's, Google made it almost impossible to run anything custom (due to Play Integrity) without you losing access to half of your apps - so in practice, I feel like Android has not even anymore that specific anymore.
If you have special preferences, there might be a specific OS/Phone that can accomodate you better but that is something you'll need to know.
I have to imagine the takeaway from comments in this thread would be a big old "it depends." Which is the best almost certainly depends on what you are looking to optimize for and which trade-offs you are willing to accept. Is a long-time iOS user who has been casually eyeing other options, I'm curious what other folks will have to say.
iOS banned NES/SNES emulators back in the day. Android has many options for NES/SNES emulators for portable gaming. Works well for turn based RPGs where imprecise touch input doesn't ruin the game.
I personally prefer iOS but Android is on a much more interesting trajectory technically, building in desktop mode, x86 emulation and virtualization have some really exciting possibilities. There's videos on YouTube of Android phones running Steam and Windows games, this stuff will be on par with a Steam Deck soon enough.
I don't think there's anything to be excited about with the future of iOS, just more of the same for as long as regulators can be kept at bay. Maybe even sillier if the rumours are true the folding iPhone is blocked from running iPad apps lol.
Hopefully Ternus will be less uptight about ancient iOS restrictions, I want my iPhone to be every bit as useful as a MacBook Neo if I connect a monitor/mouse/keyboard.
You are asking for a heated debate.
I would say its pure preference at this point. Both operating systems have converged towards each other in the last few years, where nowadays it really just comes down to your taste, the ecosystem you are in (or want to be in - ), and whether you value having potentially a bit more freedom (with some devices that make it easier to flash custom ROMs/Kernels).
What should be mentioned though: Android is not anymore as tinker-friendly as it was 5 years ago, a lot of OEMs make it hard to even unlock your bootloader's, Google made it almost impossible to run anything custom (due to Play Integrity) without you losing access to half of your apps - so in practice, I feel like Android has not even anymore that specific anymore.
If you have special preferences, there might be a specific OS/Phone that can accomodate you better but that is something you'll need to know.
I have to imagine the takeaway from comments in this thread would be a big old "it depends." Which is the best almost certainly depends on what you are looking to optimize for and which trade-offs you are willing to accept. Is a long-time iOS user who has been casually eyeing other options, I'm curious what other folks will have to say.
iOS banned NES/SNES emulators back in the day. Android has many options for NES/SNES emulators for portable gaming. Works well for turn based RPGs where imprecise touch input doesn't ruin the game.
Apple allows them now, since about a minute before the first third party app store in the EU was going to have them lol.
https://www.macrumors.com/2024/04/05/app-store-guidelines-em...
win some lose some