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posted by n1 on Thursday June 05 2014, @02:22AM   Printer-friendly
from the reality-distortion-field-is-impenetrable dept.

Chris Smith writes that Apple CEO Tim Cook, speaking during the WWDC 2014 opening keynote, took clear hits at his company's main rival, making fun of Google's Android several times. "Over 130 million customers who bought an iOS device in the past 12 months, were buying their first iOS device," Cook said. "Now, many of these customers were switchers from Android." "They had bought an Android phone... by mistake," Cook added, igniting the crowd in attendance, "and then sought a better experience, and a better life, and decided to check iPhone and iOS." Cook went on to say that nearly half of Apple's customers in China in the past six months came from Android.

Cook took another hit at Google for its fragmentation issues. "If you look at a broader group, over a third of [Android] customers, are running a version of Android from four years ago," Cook said. "That's like ancient history." Cook also addressed Android's vulnerability to malware. "Android dominates the mobile malware market," the exec said, because of its fragmentation. "No wonder experts are saying things like this," Cook said, quoting ZDNet's Adrian Kingsley-Hughes: "Android fragmentation is turning devices into a toxic hellstew of vulnerabilities."

 
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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by tathra on Friday June 06 2014, @09:15PM

    by tathra (3367) on Friday June 06 2014, @09:15PM (#52408)

    You have an Android phone, why do you need an iPod?

    partly just habit (i've had an ipod since they came out, and have tried other portable music players and they've all been junk with clunky interfaces); i was thinking about just getting another nano but figured i'd try a touch since you can make it function like a phone; and partly because i wanted to see what the big deal about them was that had people so obsessed. frankly, i cant figure out why people are so obsessed with them.

    it is useful to have your media player separate from your phone though. the touch is practically weightless and really thin, whereas if it was an iphone it'd be as thick and heavy as my galaxy s3 (or if i used my s3 as my primary media player, the bulk and weight is really annoying, in addition to needing to recharge it more than once a day). i also need them separate because i occasionally (a lot less right now than before, but still) go places with really spotty cell service, which drains batteries FAST, and dont have the ability to recharge anything for 2-3 days at a time.

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