I used Windows for some years. Windows is awful! I used it like a Windows machine. When I started using it like a Mac, I realized how much easier and faster I got everything done.
It has also never crashed. Once in a blue moon, an app will crash. I can count app crashes on one hand, and I have had my Mac for 4 years now. And yes, quite a few of those fingers would be counting Adobe Flash crashes. I too get annoyed at some of the flaws. However, I still think they make the best and most innovative products. Apple is not for all people. If you really like being able to customize your user interface, Android is for you.
It makes it much harder to do the necessary system integration. The funny thing is, people I know who applaud the customizable interface all use Windows, which is less customizable than Mac OS X which has widgets, by the way. The funny thing is — most of my software engineering colleagues in the Silicon Valley use Apple products. Seriously, a large Eclipse project on Windows is a nightmare.
I should mention that the iPhone has won J. But please, do not listen to what I say. Do your homework and make the best decision. I know people who are very happy with their Android device. I my experience, I have from imac, ipod, ipad, iphone, itouch different flavors and different versions.
Nor android neither windows had some many incompatibilities and flaws. Is Apple so slopy that we need one upgrade every month or two to fix its glitches?
I notice that a few people are having problems with their carriers after upgrading to iOS 6. The best thing to do would be to contact your carrier. These issues seem specific to a few carriers, mostly outside of the U. Exactly my thoughts!! But I really wish thy had released a stable. I am stuck in not being able o install new apps : :.
I have plans to upgrade my Iphone to 6. I hope that I wont have any other issues after the upgrade. I know it never helps to know after the fact…but.. They never do the updates correctly and there is always a need to wait to get an update to fix the last in regards to phones and tablets…never had a problem with computer updates as far as battery life…it is just as he said.
You have to recalibrate it…loads of information on the internet how to…. Good advice. I typically will update my iPad first. That said, compared to other companies, Apple is much better with upgrades. I have some horror stories about Windows Server and a few very late nights. But I must say, so far, I have been pleased with the upgrades.
AirPlay is rock solid now. The security flaw with the lock screen? I also agree that Mac updates are far better than iOS. OS X is rock solid. Apple TV is the worst of the bunch, but it has improved. I know that the iOS team had some issues when Forstall was leading it.
He was supposedly a very difficult person. Perhaps under the new leadership, it will get better with iOS 7. I bought a refurbished iPad 3 and it shipped with 5. Should I stay in this software or try the new update and just take the hit. I mean the machine is still under warranty till April I have jailbroken the 5.
I upgraded my iPad 2 to iOS 6. I just want to make sure people are informed of the very minor security flaws. Even if someone gets into your device with the exploit paperclip and eject sim card they can only access your contacts and photos. The releases around iOS 5. AirPlay would crash occasionally when playing music. Sometimes it would happen times in an evening.
They fixed it. Perhaps the leadership changes at Apple have made a difference. And Microsoft? I have to agree with you. I have updated my iPad 2 with every update, though not immediately all the time. At first, I was worried about updating! I have noticed some problems with FaceTime, however.
That happened with my laptop, too, which was a Dell laptop. My opinion: If you have an iPad, get the upgrade. I replaced my linksys router with an Airport Extreme. Yeah, it is expensive, but worth every penny. I would have to reset my linksys router about once a week. My Airport Extreme has been flawless for over two years. Apple also pushes the updates, rather than forcing the user to be proactive, go to the website, fiddle with flakey software, etc.
I agree — update your iPad first and use it for a few days. If it works, upgrading your iPhone should work out. You can only back up content and settings. Once iOS is upgraded it cannot go back to prior version because Apple no longer signs 5.
Unless you jailbreak, that is correct. Still, one should backup their settings and other items before upgrading, in case the device hangs or has some data loss. I will be creating a how-to guide for upgrading best practices. If all is OK, I upgrade my iPhone. My upgrade-phobia is cured, but was caused by a few decades of Microsoft Windows usage.
I was wrong about that — you can only backup the previous OS version and restore if you jailbreak your device. It is still a good idea to backup before an upgrade. I removed my comment so as not to misinform anyone. Hopefully you backed them up with either iTunes or iCloud. If so, they can be easily restored. If not, they are likely gone. From my research, it appears there is a damaged connection. Other people have reported this, after upgrading to 6. The software upgrade does not damage the phone.
You need to take it to a place that repairs iPhones, where they are familiar with this issue, and they can re-solder the connection with a heat gun or replace the wi-fi module. Some people fix this temporarily by putting the iPhone in a freezer. It can damage the device in other ways. But this again proves the fact that it is a bad connection. This could be a flaw in manufacturing or the phone could have been damaged by a shock or exposure to extreme heat or cold.
Most likely, your wi-fi was spotty, and worked intermittently, due to the connection issue. The 6. They probably had complaints about wi-fi problems, found that affected devices had physical problems, and decided to disable it, so users would get the root cause fixed.
Please let me know if your wi-fi was spotty before the upgrade. This seems to be the case for most users who have this issue. So in hindsight then I should remain on 5. Cool, I will do such thing then. I actually looked into getting an S3 a few months back. I read the reviews on the Verizon site, because the reviewers had to have owned the phone. The main issues they complained about were dropped calls and poor battery life.
Additionally, Verizon recently announced that half of the smart phones they sold last quarter were iPhones. This happened while Samsung released a new phone, the S4, and Apple has no new release.
Even then, the iPhone outsold competitors, at least on Verizon. The competitors split up the remaining half. Also, JD Power ranked the iPhone 1 in terms of user satisfaction. Samsung is further down on the list. No electronic device is perfect. Very few users report battery life issues with the iPhone even after upgrades , and in many cases, they just need to recalibrate the battery.
In my own experience, running the latest update, I still get stellar battery life. I charge my phone about once a week.
Standby time is excellent. In normal use about hours of actual use a day , I charge my iPhone about once a week. I use my iPad much more often, yet still charge it about once a week. Battery life is actually one of the strengths of Apple devices. Perception of good battery life is relative. An iPhone owner who charged their phone once a week will be annoyed if they have to charge it twice a week.
After 6. Some users of other smart phones may be delighted to get 6 hours of actual use. For an iPhone, that would be unacceptable. Anyway, I know people who really like their S3. If you really like UI customization, Android is the best. I do find it odd that people who claim they like UI customization use Windows instead of Linux.
It almost seems to me like a talking point that they regurgitate, without truly accepting. As a site that features consumer advocacy, however, I suggest that people do the research, read real reviews and put it in perspective.
No phone is perfect. Description: A state management issue existed in the handling of Mach-O executable files with overlapping segments. This issue was addressed by refusing to load an executable with overlapping segments. Description: An information disclosure issue existed in the ARM prefetch abort handler.
This issue was addressed by panicking if the prefetch abort handler is not being called from an abort context.
Description: When restoring from backup, lockdownd changed permissions on certain files even if the path to the file included a symbolic link. This issue was addressed by not changing permissions on any file with a symlink in its path. Description: A logic issue existed in the handling of emergency calls from the lock screen. This issue was addressed through improved lock state management. This issue was addressed by performing additional validation of pipe object pointers.
Impact: Visiting a maliciously crafted website may lead to an unexpected application termination or arbitrary code execution. Description: An invalid cast issue existed in the handling of SVG files.
This issue was addressed through improved type checking.
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