anony_mouse
Banned
- Aug 10, 2013
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The, "App" ecosystem has a weakness when many aspects of the phone's capabilities are based on it. The end user experience can suffer due to poor development and worse support.
Thanks for an interesting post. I'd like to respond (while accepting of course that you know what is the best phone for you).
The problem with relying on everything being built into the OS is that it assumes the one company (in this case Microsoft) has all the best ideas and can support everything that everyone wants. It also makes that company very powerful - they get to choose what is in and what is out, and of course give preference to their own interests. Imagine if Windows on the desktop didn't have such good 3rd party extensibility - would we ever have had, say, web browsers? Or Skype? Or actually most of the features we use today, whether used by everyone or very specialist? I also find 3rd party apps are usually better supported than core OS features. I expect the Facebook and Spotify apps on my Moto G to be updated long after Motorola give up on the core OS. And hopefully app developers are working on all kinds of exciting new things, which they can release fully independently of OS updates, and independently of whether the company controlling the platform thinks it's a good idea, or aligns with their interests.