My, oh my, how times have changed.
Just a handful of years ago, Android was seen as the scrappy underdog of the mobile world. Google's operating system was widely viewed as lagging behind Apple's more mature offering and, with each new release, following iOS's lead to build out a more polished and complete platform.
That was then.
At some point in the past few years, the tables turned. Few would deny that Apple's been playing catch-up on the platform development front for quite a while now -- "innovating" familiar features and introducing all sorts of "revolutionary" new stuff that's been old news to folks on Android.
With this week's announcement of iOS 8, though -- dubbed by Apple as its "biggest release since the launch of the App Store" -- Apple's launching its most overt effort yet to bring Android-like features onto its mobile devices. It's no exaggeration: A staggering number of iOS 8's standout consumer-facing additions are things that are closely identified with the Android experience.
How Apple's iOS 8 announcement looked to many of us
To wit:
Widgets
Yup, iOS is finally embracing 'em. They'll be limited to the system's Notification Center, but the same basic concept is there.
Hands-free voice activation
"Hey Siri, where have I seen this before?"
App-to-app sharing
Apple's at long last letting apps communicate with each other -- something that sounds mundane but has the potential to transform the mobile tech experience.
Interactive notifications
A natural follow-up to the introduction of notifications a few years back. Apple's implentation actually takes things a step further than what's currently available on Android, with the ability not only to tap a button but also to compose a message right from the notification itself, which is a nice touch.
Next-word prediction on system keyboard
Welcome to [2011]
Third-party keyboard support
Kindly forget that as recently as last March, Apple insisted that supporting third-party keyboards like SwiftKey and Swype wouldn't make for "the best customer experience." After all these years, Apple users are in for a treat.
The list goes on and on:
• Cloud-based photo storage
• Cloud-based photo sharing
• Cloud-synced document editing
• Native song identification
• A contextual search app that includes things like directions and movie times
• Travel time notifications
• Tab-based private browsing
• App-specific battery usage info
• Cloud-based photo sharing
• Cloud-synced document editing
• Native song identification
• A contextual search app that includes things like directions and movie times
• Travel time notifications
• Tab-based private browsing
• App-specific battery usage info
You get the point. There are certainly other elements of iOS 8 -- particularly behind the scenes and in the realm of iPhone-to-Mac connectivity -- but much of the stuff users will notice revolves around Android-like catch-up features.
To be fair, this situation is a little amusing because of Apple's trademark "We innovate everything" and "We know what's best" attitude. That attitude's always pounded home in the form of definitive and absolute truths -- "this is the way it should be done," "that is not what users need" -- until suddenly it isn't.
At this rate, who knows? A 4.7-in. display might even become "the perfect size" for a phone before long. It might even be "revolutionary" if it does.
iOS 8 and the Android imitation fixation
Reviewed by Anonymous
on
June 05, 2014
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