I am not an Apple "Fanboy" by any stretch of the imagination. My primary work computer is a Windows machine, and I have a Windows laptop as well. My first smartphone was a Blackberry, then I got another Blackberry, followed by a Samsung Galaxy S2. It was only after that that I got an iPhone, starting with iPhone 5s, and now the iPhone 6. I also own a 3rd Generation iPad, and will probably get the new one if it gets announced this coming October.
I say all that so that you know that I don't have any kind of loyalty to one particular brand or company. All I care about is that a device works, does what it is supposed to do, easy to operate and navigate, and is relatively secure. I would guess that for most people, and the average consumer, that is what we all care about, not that we are buying an Apple produce, a Samsung, an iOS, a Android, etc.. etc.
Having said that, I did migrate, if you noticed, from an Android phone to an iOS (iPhone). I have several issues with Andriods:
1. It has become the "Windows" of the mobile operating system. This is where Google is responsible for the OS, but the hardware can be anything compatible with it. As someone who has been a lifelong Windows user, I can see how uneven the experience can be. Inevitably, there will be problems and incompatibility between the hardware and the OS, especially after an upgrade. This happened to me with my Galaxy S2 when it had an OS upgrade to Ice Cream Sandwich. The device became unstable and slow. I distinctively remember saying something to the effect that that was what I normally get if I were to do a Windows OS upgrade. I am not sure I want to put myself through that experience on my mobile devices.
2. The bloatware! Oh, can we talk about them! Not only do you get bloatware from the hardware manufacturer, you also get them from your mobile career, something that Apple strictly prohibits on iPhones.
3. Who do you call? If my Apple device have issues, I need to just contact Apple, or bring it to an Apple store, it is usually taken care of. Who do you contact when your have issues with your Android device? First of all, was it a hardware or software issue? Do you contact Google, or the hardware manufacturer, or the mobile career. Trust me, as someone who had been passed from one company to another trying to solve a problem on my Galaxy S2, this got old very, very quickly!
4. The Ecosystem. I disagree with KrisOhn's take on the "closed" business model of Apple. The fact that they make their own OS and hardware means that they have a better quality control and a better marriage between hardware and software. The latest debacle of iOS8.0.1 notwithstanding, there is less "drama" in Apple's machines and devices since they know exactly the machines they are writing the code for. I seldom get apps closing for no apparent reason, unlike my Galaxy S2, especially after the ICS upgrade. And this leads me to the issue of:
5. Security. As strict as Apple is in allowing which iOS app can appear on the App Store, this makes for a sense of security that these apps have been tested, and more importantly, not built-in with something malicious. The same can't be said about Android apps, where you don't even need to go to the Andriod apps store to get Andriod apps. There have been reports of malicious Andriod apps that either became ad pushers or worse still, collecting information on a particular device. I know that no device and no OS can be completely secure, but these are just too big of a hole to fall into that is minimized by the "closed" iOS ecosystem.
6. Ease of use and integration. That ecosystem allows for an amazingly smooth integration between various Apple products and software. I can easily see being seduced by what iOS8 can do with the upcoming MacOS. Such seamless switching back and forth between the two is what many of us want to have, i.e. we focus on capabilities and ease of execution, not specs, etc.
I also found it interesting that more than 3/4 of the faculty members in the physics dept. where I work own iPhones. Presumably, these are not (i) dumb people (ii) people who are easily influenced by "style" and "bells and whistles", and (iii) people with a lot of time in their busy lives and want to fiddle around with mobile devices.
Zz.