If I was to venture away from the iPhone for the first time in qo years or so, which Android one should I be getting?
I know nothing about them but the S6 Edge+ or similar doesn't look to shabby.
Anything else I should be thinking of? This is all a new area to me
Thanks.
Nexus 5x, nexus 6x depending on how big a phone. Also the one+two is something I have been looking at but it is a big phone.
The s6 is pretty but my major issue with it is the software they push on you. Ok you don't have to use it but I think native Android is much better.
Hope that helps
Quote from: BrotherTobious;410552Nexus 5x, nexus 6x depending on how big a phone. Also the one+two is something I have been looking at but it is a big phone.
The s6 is pretty but my major issue with it is the software they push on you. Ok you don't have to use it but I think native Android is much better.
Hope that helps
+1 to the recommendations for the 5X and 6X - it depends on how big you want the phone.
Another +1 for native android.
My better half has an S6 edge. It is a pretty phone, and fast. The edge part has a few tiny tricks that are half useful, but mostly it still feels like a bit of a sales gimmick, and the cases are expensive. In terms of looks this is your iPhone equivalent, though you'll get all the Samsung bloat on top of Android. Some might prefer it I guess, but I miss plain Android when using it.
I've no experience of the recent nexus 5/6 but the 4 i had was excellent. My current one+one is a great (and relatively cheap) phone and came with CyanogenMod, which is like tuned vanilla android. But, it is massive and that comes at a price - already worn holes through front pockets of 2 pairs of jeans :sideways: Not a problem for inside jacket pockets perhaps. The one+two is also massive and it and the one+X come with one+'s version of cyanogen called OxygenOS so I'd read up on reviews about that.
Either way you should expect a few weeks/months of being annoyed that android isn't the same as iOS before you grow to like it! You'll also need to live without the Apple ecosystem of connected apps, which may swing your decision back depending what the rest of your family/friends/business use and how willing they are to change :flirty:
Had a (One Plus) OP1, and now using an OP2.
They are very good phones, with an affordable price tag. Don't have anything to say against them, and that's saying something.
One Plus X is a very nice iPhone 6 (not +) sized phone. Nice everything, dual sim, or sim/ sd config. Nice cases etc.
The ceramic versions is apparently gorgeous.
https://oneplus.net/uk/oneplus-x
Thanks guys.
I didn't realise about the Samsung bloatware stuff and that's a major turn off for me.
I'll have a look at the Nexus and One+ phones when I'm passing the store later.
Back in the days stock Android was very bleah, Google really weren't very good at design. I assume most tech companies who wanted to take on Apple and the iPhone thought it was far too bland and feature poor to compete so they added their own skins and launchers and fancy apps, to make their phones more appealing and 'iPhone like'. Then MatÃas Duarte came along and created Google Material design (the current Android launcher and design style) and instantly made all the other Android launchers from Sony, Samsung, Motorola etc look terrible. Google released their own set of core apps that were built into the OS, which made most of the phone manufacturers apps pretty pointless.
Phone makers also have the annoying habit of selling space on your phone to other companies and removing your ability to delete them. Hence the small army of older Samsung phone owners who carry about the Autotrader App, whether they want it or not. I think the phone makers have reigned in their land grab of you phone storage space but most phones still come with plenty of crap on them. Some phone makers did do an 'Android Experience' version of their phone, which was the same phone but with stock Android and none of the crap. I'm not sure if anyone still makes them though?
So IMHO stock Android is vastly superior to any phone manufacturers offering, get's instant updates and security fixes, comes with the best core apps as stock and looks beautiful. Of course you can add a custom launcher and make it look any way you like. So go for a stock Android phone either the 5x or 6x and you will be sorted.
Just for clarification, the 2 current Google Nexus models are the 5X and the 6P. I have the 5X (replaced my Nexus 5). The 6P is the flagship Nexus but the screen it too big for my tastes.
Thanks. I was getting a little confused.
I selected the Nexus 5X as my new work phone, but our only approved vendor discontinued it so I was left with the 6P as the only pure Android choice left. It's a spectacular phone. It's actually a little bit taller than the Nexus 6, but slimmer and a bit more easily handled. The fingerprint sensor placement works well too, not nearly as daft as you'd think at first glance. It's where your finger'd rest when grabbing the phone onehanded out of your pocket.
Still would have preferred the 5X if given a choice.
Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk
I had a play with them and thought the 6P felt good. Yes it's a larger phone but for my usage of phone, email and text it's a good fit. I think all the models are the same but I'm early doors on researching it. I'll be buying it straight off the shelf with no contract so will see what I can come up with.
All good so far - insomuch as it's arrived and working.
Anyone please feel free to let me know any apps they find essential inc. browsers / email proggies etc.
IIRC someone mentioned about changing the interface to a more friendly one. Still a good idea? if so which one?
Quote from: Penfold;410835All good so far - insomuch as it's arrived and working.
Anyone please feel free to let me know any apps they find essential inc. browsers / email proggies etc.
IIRC someone mentioned about changing the interface to a more friendly one. Still a good idea? if so which one?
It comes with email, browser already installed. To give some examples, I would add:
Google authenticator
Zoiper (voip app)
Tapatalk
Avast
Microsoft office mobile
Amazon underground
Santander Cycle Hire (for Boris bikes in London - always handy)
Dropbox (I think Gdrive is already installed)
Other apps are down to what suits you and what you need. I have loads more installed, but the vast bulk of the basic stuff is already installed on the 6P.
Good luck!
Thanks :)
I like calanderpad, Met office, steam, I use nova to make changes to the home screen.
Thanks.
TL, how do you sync your outlook on your PC (Calendar and contacts) to your phone - if you do?
I synch it by not using Outlook. Why would I use Outlook when everything is so perfectly embedded in Gmail?
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk
Know what you're saying but I do find an offline desktop email client so much easier and faster.
So run Gmail Offline.
I'm also staggered that your PC searches emails faster than Google's servers! :p:
I moved to Gmail for a number of reasons, but one of them was how much faster searching was on the web compared to using Outlook locally. I do not think the offline argument is a good one, especially as Outlook is moving rapidly in the direction of being online!
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk
Gmail is a pretty good email client for Exchange/Activesync, but for my actual gmail account i find Inbox is invaluable.
UI-wise, I use ActionLauncher 3 instead of the stock one. Shutters and covers are great features, and what works well in stock is kept in AL.
Other than that, stock Android comes loaded with most of the apps I need apart from service-specific ones.
Keep is a particularly brilliant one for notes and reminders. Haven't used Evernote since that arrived.
Oh, one major recommendation both for Android and iOS is SnapSeed. Brilliant image tuner by now Google-owned Nik Software. They're more known for their brilliant suite of Photoshop plugins.
Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk
Quote from: faust82;410885Other than that, stock Android comes loaded with most of the apps I need apart from service-specific ones.
Keep is a particularly brilliant one for notes and reminders. Haven't used Evernote since that arrived.
+1 for Keep.
I forgot to mention I use Priority Inbox for gmail, to help automatically filter my messages.
Also take a look at GmailDelaySend. Very useful for doing work at one day/time and having the email automatically sent at another day/time. It allows you to be in two places at once!
Thanks chaps.
Sure taking a bit of getting used to but I'll get there.