Markham Ranja
Banned
- Jan 21, 2014
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I have both a Nexus 5 and Lumia 920 and an iPad. So I use all three mobile OSes though only WP8 and Android as a phone. And so far I don't see much of an app gap in the real world. Bloggers and 'journalists' talk about the app gap but have they really used these OSes in the real world?
So far, on Windows Phone, I've missed a few banking apps, a meetup app, a few other minor apps I would use once a month. But guess what? The mobile website versions are fine.
On Android, I miss a good offline navigation app. I use gps all the time and Navfree is very poor compared to Here drive. If I had to choose between missing a few banking apps and such vs a good offline navigation app, I choose the navigation app. Windows also has Mixx Radio with free offline mixes. Not sure Android or iOS has anything like this.
So Windows has more apps that I actually use on a daily basis. I welcome other people's real world experience who actually use multiple mobile OSes.
Hi,
Allow me to take the opportunity to explain to you that you are not the world. The sun does not, sadly, revolve around you.
There are more than six billion people on this planet, each of whom are different, and therefore are likely to use their phone differently. For you, offline navigation is important and I respect that. However, I travel a lot, drive rarely and in fact have never owned a car. So navigation itself is irrelevant to me, though I do use it to walk around cities or get public transit directions. For example, I just got back to my hotel from a great Saturday in Tokyo and Google Maps served me perfectly (note that Here and Bing don't have any sort of useful information for Japan). However, I often need to transfer funds to various people and so my Citibank app is extremely important to me (and the mobile site sucks balls).
So you see that different people have different priorities. QuizUp is so popular right now that three people I know in India, including my sister who has my Lumia 1020, are abandoning WP just so they can play with their friends (remember that social pressures and the feeling of being "left out" can be very decisive). This app may be useless to you, but it is important to thousands of people.
And finally, it is amusing that in this thread there are people who admit they need a second non-WP device
