Smartphone Showdown: Comparing iPhones and Androids to Suit Your Lifestyle
When you decide to buy your first smartphone, your first decision is which one to buy. The major options are iPhone and Android. While both offer many great features, iPhones and Androids are very different in several ways.
Lifewire
Overall Findings
iPhone
Closed hardware and software ecosystem.
Manufacturer: Apple.
Built-in assistant: Siri.
Also compatible with Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa.
Fewer versions available at a time.
Features limited to what Apple implements.
Android
Easy to download apps from both official and unofficial sources.
Manufacturers: Google, Samsung, OnePlus, Motorola, and more.
Built-in assistant: Google Assistant.
Also compatible with Amazon Alexa and Samsung Bixby.
Available with a variety of features and prices.
Whatever phone you current own, it’s not perfect. However, that doesn’t mean that switching is automatically going to make you happier. Before you make the switch, you need to take a close look at the following for each (in terms of the features important to you):
Hardware
Operating systems
Available apps
Gaming potential
Security
Virtual assistants
Device integration
Maintenance
Depending on your specific needs, some items will be more critical than others as you decide which phone to purchase.
Hardware: Android Has More Options
iPhone
Only a few models available at a time.
Android
Available from a variety of manufacturers, some of whom are better than others.
Hardware is the first place where the differences between the iPhone and Android become clear.
Only Apple makes iPhones, so it has extremely tight control over how thesoftware and hardware work together. On the other hand, Google offers Android software to many phone makers, including Samsung, HTC, and Motorola. Because of that, Android phones vary in size, weight, features, and quality.
Premium-priced Android phones are about as good as the iPhone, but a cheaper Android device with fewer features may be all you need.
If you’re buying an iPhone, you need to pick a model. Because many companies make Android devices, you must choose a brand and a model. Some may prefer the choice, but others appreciate Apple’s greater simplicity and higher quality.
Runs on Android, with some manufacturers using a slightly different version.
Android may update less regularly.
Android phones run on Google’sAndroid operating system , while iPhones use Apple’siOS . In general, they work the same: You’ll have a home screen with your most popular apps, including games and utilities, a phone app to make calls, a camera app for pictures, and a messaging app to send texts. They also use touch interfaces, including hardware like accelerometers or gyroscopes, for more functions.
Apple releases a new version of iOS about every fall, with additional updates throughout the year. In the earlier days of Android, updates were less frequent and regular (Android 2.0 came out in 2009, while both 3 and 4 came out in 2011). Recently, however, Android has fallen more into an annual update cycle. Some Android device makers, like Samsung,use a slightly modified operating system version.
Some Android makers are slow to update their phones to the latestversion of the Android OS and sometimes don’t update their phones. Apple typically supports phones for five or six years old, Samsung supports phones for around four years, and Google supports the latest Pixels for seven years.