While phone fans revel in playing top trumps over screen resolutions and processor braininess, spec sheet point scoring counts for little if your phone's fiddly to use and finicky with the basics -- emailing, sharing photos and mapping your route across town.
The iPhone 5, which includes a longer screen and increased processing power, and its Android challengers -- the Samsung Galaxy S3 and the HTC One X -- are among the most powerful phones on the planet. But how do they fare with everyday tasks?
I spent some time with all three to see how each device deals with standard smart phone doings. The point here isn't to declare a winner but rather to take a step back and examine how each phone deals with the essentials, to help gauge what's best for you.
Interface and settings
As both the Galaxy S3 and HTC One X run Google's Android operating system, you might expect their features to be identical. Android, however, is an open platform that allows manufacturers to change the interface and add their own skins over the top.

Both Samsung and HTC have added their own tweaks to the mix, but the core structure of Android is still immediately recognisable. Both phones offer the standard Android multiple home screens for you to fill up with app icons and widgets. Widgets are live tiles that show information -- such as your friends' status updates on Facebook or Twitter -- on your home screen, without having to open the app.
These widgets don't appear on the iPhone and it's something Android fans hold against the iPhone time and time again. Apple's phone shows numerous pages of grids of app icons that don't feature live information. It's a much more stripped-down approach and one that is likely to appeal to the less techy among you, who don't want to fiddle about with resizing widgets and moving icons around.
If you're a keen social networker and love having all your mates' goings on at your fingertips then you'll likely appreciate the Android approach. But if you need just a small selection of core apps to flick between, without the bells and whistles of live tiles, then iOS may be the choice for you.
When you dive into the settings menus, you'll notice there's not a massive amount of difference between each phone. The categories are displayed in a long list, all of which are clearly marked and easy to read. Wi-Fi and Bluetooth switches are all displayed at the top of the list for quick access. The One X lets you do all this from the home screen with an included widget, while you can download very similar widgets for free on the S3, or just control common settings from the notification bar, which you can pull down from the top of the screen at any time.
With the iPhone, you have to go into settings to turn on Airplane mode or turn off Wi-Fi, which is a pain.

Android phones typically provide greater control over features and the S3 and One X are no exception. Both mobiles allow you to change numerous settings to do with the power and app storage, as well as extras like the ability to turn your phone over to mute an incoming call. The S3 can call the contact you're looking at just by holding the phone to your face, while the One X can switch to speakerphone mode by turning it face down during a call. These might not be life-changing features but they're likely to come in handy from time to time.
While the iPhone lets you change the important settings like screen brightness and Bluetooth connectivity easily, it doesn't let you dive into complex settings for deep customisation of battery-saving methods or developer options. This "it's set up to be the best already" approach will appeal to some, but not everyone.
Email, calendar and contacts
Although you might do most of your communicating over Twitter, Facebook or good old-fashioned text messaging, sending and receiving emails is a crucial tool on smart phones for many. It's therefore important for setting up and using your email to be made as painless as possible.
As Android phones, both the One X and the Galaxy S3 make the process delightfully simple. If you use Google's Gmail for email then as soon as you enter your account details when you first turn the phone on, your inbox will automatically sync, along with your calendar, contacts and access to the Google Play store.

Your iPhone is likely to be linked with your Apple ID first -- for apps and iTunes downloads -- so you'll need to manually add your Gmail (or other) address. Adding an account is very simple though, requiring you to head into the accounts section, select what type of email you want to add and pop in your address and password. This process is roughly the same for adding extra accounts to the S3 and One X.
On all three phones, when you add an email account, you can select whether you also want it to sync to your contacts and calendar. If you accept, then all contacts you have saved to that email account's address book, as well as calendar entries, will be copied over to your phone's internal database, saving you the hassle of putting everyone in one by one.
The stock email app on the Galaxy S3 is functional, if a little ugly. It's very dark, which I don't find particularly pleasant but it groups your email inbox into date clusters, which makes finding emails from several weeks ago that much easier.

HTC's stock email app, meanwhile, is much lighter and shows your inbox as one long list. At the top right you'll see a small menu button with a drop-down box letting you refresh your inbox or view different folders. It's a little frustrating not having a refresh button in easy reach as it's often crucial to keep in view when you're impatiently waiting for that important email to arrive.
Alternatively, the Gmail app is available for both Android phones and shows all your linked inboxes in a clear and simple way, with instant access to important buttons along the bottom. You can also lay it down as a live widget on your home screen, which will show you your inbox without you needing to load up the app.

Writing and sending emails is a pretty standard affair across all platforms. Hit the compose button, start typing a name and it will offer up auto-complete options for people in your address book. On the S3, you also have the option to change font styles and colours to jazz up your emails.
Attaching files to your emails in Android is a simple case of hitting the attach button and selecting an option from the list. iOS 6 has finally brought the ability to let you attach photos or videos into an email -- you press and hold in the email body, hit the arrow and select attach from the menu that appears.

The iPhone brings the ability to link Facebook contacts with phone contacts. It's a great way of immediately moving contacts over but if your Facebook friends haven't put their contact information on their pages, you won't see any. In my case, most of my saved contacts didn't have phone numbers or email addresses attached, making them mostly useless.
Syncing the S3 and HTC One X with Facebook produces similar results, but it can also pull contacts from your Google accounts too. If you've already gone to the effort of saving contacts to it then it'll automatically pull them into your phone.
Social sharing
With powerful cameras packed into the back of all three phones, it's only natural to want to be able to show off your favourite snaps with your friends. Thankfully, all models make the process delightfully simple.
Previously, the iPhone's only photo sharing option was to email up to five pictures at a time. Hardly social. With the launch of iOS 6, Facebook and Twitter integration runs deep, allowing you to share photos to these networks directly from the gallery app. Handily, you can select as many photos as you want to batch upload to an existing album on Facebook.

Similarly, the One X's Facebook for HTC Sense app -- Sense being the name HTC gives to its Android skin -- also lets you batch upload photos to Facebook or individual images to Twitter. The S3 only allows you to do one photo at a time as standard, so you'll need to make use of other apps if you want to upload en mass.
The iPhone lets you update the essentials of Facebook and Twitter. But if your social networking waters run deeper, then Android might be more up your street. Both Android blowers automatically let you share to services like Flickr, Google+ or Picasa, but when you download other apps like Instagram or Pinterest, the gallery app will now let you share directly to these as well.
Maps
As Android phones, both the Galaxy S3 and HTC One X have a full roster of Google apps on board including Google Maps. This includes features like local information, turn-by-turn navigation and, more recently, the ability to sync your searches between your phone and your PC.
Apple used to make use of Google's maps but ditched them in the latest update in favour of its own mapping software. Apple has taken a lot of heat recently about this as its service seems to not only provide much less information about the locations, but frequently gets things wrong.
We've carried out an extensive test, pitting the new iOS maps against Android, and Apple hasn't come off at all well. If geographical information is a big concern for you, you might want to steer towards Android. Apple is only taking its first steps with maps, however, so it's likely things will improve -- if only with the release of a standalone Google Maps app for iOS 6.
Conclusion
While the iPhone 5 and its iOS 6 software bring extra features not present on earlier models, the phone still offers a stripped-back interface and user experience that's so simple a toddler could use it.
The Android experience on both the Galaxy S3 and HTC One X is a more technical affair, with live widgets constantly updating on the home screens and drop-down menus all over the place bursting with options.
There's really no 'best' phone to choose from the three, it just depends on what you're after. If you need quick access to essential tools with no fuss, the iPhone is the way to go -- as long as maps aren't essential to you. If you love the idea of customising your mobile, playing with settings to the nth degree or even rooting your phone to use custom third-party software, Android is where you'll be happiest.
Which camp does your heart reside in? Are you a loyal Apple follower or do you pride yourself on the 'droid in your hand? Interface directly in the comments below or over on our inter-Facebook page.
Update 26 September: A previous version of this article stated that you couldn't attach a file directly to an email in iOS 6. This is not the case and we've amended the text accordingly. We also clarified and expanded the section on motion control, and the S3's settings control from the notification bar.

Comments 65
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kcajtam 25 September, 2012 17:34
Can we have another one of these, with Android, on either the one x or galaxy S3, iOS6 and Windows phone 8 (when available)????
Choccie Milk 25 September, 2012 17:57
Just a small correction. (Probably) You say that the S3 can be turned over to mute a call but HTC were the first to have this and HTC phones have had the feature for a long time so unless something odd has happened I assume the One X has it too.
Leszcz 25 September, 2012 18:14
I didn't notice it at first because I use Swiftkeyboard on my s3 as well, but it's not samsung stock keyboard and should be changed. Not sure what that one x keyboard is but look horrible!
anonymous 25 September, 2012 18:27
You can actually attach a photo or video in iOS's mail. Just hold the finger in the body select attach photo or video and it's done.
anonymous 25 September, 2012 18:27
U dint talked about the looks of iPhone. It's d most handsome phone around. I love its look and the material not lyk Samsung plastic body!
anonymous 25 September, 2012 18:39
@Anonymous 18:27
SHUT THE HELL UP!
It's an article on the interface, not the phone itself, and for all your fanboyism you still do not have a grasp of physics! Your TV is plastic, your kettle is probably plastic, it's an all-round good material for heat-resistance, reduced electrical interference and so forth. Did it not occur to you that it's plastic NOT because it's cheap, but because it was a better solution for what Samsung was aiming to achieve. By the way, I have a 4S but sooooo sick of comments like yours!
anonymous 25 September, 2012 18:43
The purpose was to compare tech specs. The iphone has never changed its style, which is boring.
anonymous 25 September, 2012 18:51
@anonymous 25 September, 2012 18:27
Because it is an interface (OS) face-off you fool!
Harry1984 25 September, 2012 19:01
@ anonymous 18:39
Bit harsh wasn't it. I have neither phone but can see where the OP was coming from. It's a matter of personal preference. I prefer a matt finish to a tv, as opposed to the glossy look. Others prefer to see their reflection in the bezel. And i'm glad.
I don't really care if either material improves the functionality of the tv. As with the phones, the look of the product far outweighs the almost negligable effects it's design has on functionality. Yeah the article was concentrating on interface, but i've seen youtube videos on magnets provoke arguments on racism so I don't think the OP's opinion was all that far-removed. Chiiiiill maaaaaaan!
Daniel Rawr 25 September, 2012 19:21
Haaactually CNET writer as far as I know it was HTC that created the "flip your phone to silent" functionality and its still available on HTC One X
billfred 25 September, 2012 19:33
Yeah, the flip to mute this has been on HTC Sense for years.
anonymous 25 September, 2012 20:18
Seriously I can't understand why Google's Nexus with stock android Jelly Bean was not on the list. It's soo slick and actually looks much better than any of these.
shauney3 25 September, 2012 23:27
Erm, why wasn't the Nokia 3210 compared too? ;-)
Meleagru 25 September, 2012 23:29
Other than the legendary "user experience", iOS seems to come up short on many fronts when compared to Android. It boggles the mind that Apple still hasn't gotten a Swype type keyboard. It's one of the coolest things on Android and whenever I can, I get a kick showing it off to people. Only true Apple fanboys haven't been impressed so far.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 01:18
You can insert an image or video from within an email in IOS6. You simply hold your finger down to bring up the copy/paste/insert image menu.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 02:49
ok, good as long as it makes a call,text,takes a pic,video,receive your e-mail,voice mail (help if a left out something) i dont care for anyof them .I always wait for the left over after all of you have spent your hard earn money on foolishness that cost these companies about $50.00 a smartphone for all of us dumb!@#$$ !!
anonymous 26 September, 2012 05:53
Htc one x is the best one... HTC one X and S3 are the best,, apple sucks
anonymous 26 September, 2012 07:28
I have to admit, the One X's interface looks really nice.
I really don't get why people say Apple "suck", when they don't. I am a little iffy that the company keep on filing law suits, but don't say they suck up against their products - they're really good.
Being an iPhone 4S (used to use Android).
Seriously why do people not like iPhones? They're just as good as any other phone!
anonymous 26 September, 2012 08:39
Just a little corrective note - your article says that you cannot attach a picture from within the mail app on iOS 6 but you actually can. It's one of the updates that we should have had ages ago!
Nice article btw
David Pert 26 September, 2012 09:32
Nice article. Two of the key things for me on a day to day use of my phone are battery life and internet connectivity. How do these compare in normal use for the three?
anonymous 26 September, 2012 10:04
Samsung makes beautiful phones. This is a fact. However they have an Achilles Heel and that is their companion software, similar in purpose to itunes etc. Samsung has this program called KIES. The man on the phone when I called Samsung said it was a "very sensitive program". Very sensitive means USER UNFRIENDLY and that it what it is. It is extremely glitchy. I love my Samsung phone but because of KIES I will be choosing a different brand for my next smart phone.
k2hsharpe 26 September, 2012 10:08
re: bluetooth/wireless switches etc
my S2 gives me instant access to wireless & bluetooth & gps & silent mode & portrait/landacape screen in the dropdown notification bar at the top of the home screen. A long press on this notification bar gives me instant access to screen brightness - slide finger R is brighter, slide L is dimmer. This is stock standard TouchWiz. My S1 hadvthis also. Does the S3 not have the same?
JasonX 26 September, 2012 10:27
CNET Editors: Please remove comment '25 September, 2012 22:30'
Nice Article...would've liked to see a WP OS in there as well but i guess we'll have to wait until its out
anonymous 26 September, 2012 10:32
which phone is better for synching with outlook run on PC?
darkyndy 26 September, 2012 11:05
HTC interface on Android. I had HTC Desire, loved a lot, I had Samsung S2 hated that interface, now I have HTC One X and I love it.
Nick Hide 26 September, 2012 11:07
@Choccie Milk and others - thanks for pointing out the One X's flip to mute ability. We forgot about that because it's not an option you turn on, it just does it. We've expanded the section on motion control to include some other things the S3 and One X can do.
Nick Hide 26 September, 2012 11:09
@JasonX we've deleted that comment, sorry about that.
We'll definitely be giving Windows Phone 8 an extreme close-up in the next few months, probably when we have a Nokia Lumia 920 to test.
Nick Hide 26 September, 2012 11:14
@k2hsharpe yes it does - we've clarified that in the text. Thanks for pointing that out.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 12:18
How about iCloud/iWork vs Google Drive?
anonymous 26 September, 2012 12:48
3 great phones - personally the S3 wins its for me!!
anonymous 26 September, 2012 12:51
"With the iPhone, you have to go into settings to turn on Airplane mode or turn off Wi-Fi, which is a pain."
What's so painful about it? Both Android and iOS are 2 steps action.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 13:14
I really like the gs3 but my problem with it it the bloatware. This is why I ended up buying the galaxy nexus. The software imho is the best out there. If the sg4 came out with the next version of android in it's vanilla form I would happily buy one. However, at the minute, I'll certainly being eyeing up the follow up to the nexus. Like someone else mentioned, why was the vanilla jelly bean not mentioned or even win os?
anonymous 26 September, 2012 13:30
One thing that wasn't mentioned in this article is that with Android you aren't stuck with the interface that the manufacturer intended you to use. I have a Galaxy Note and found TouchWiz unpleasant to use. I am now running GoLauncherEX (perfectly legal and available on google play) which has completely changed the interface of my phone and given me loads of features that didn't exist before such as a scrolling dock, new widgets and gesture control. I've been running it for the best part of a year with no glitches or crashes, and the dev regularly updates with new features.
There are several other alternatives available on google play as well, and of course there's always the option to root your phone and install completely new firmware, such as cyanogen (although the legalities of this is a bit more hazy...). It's this ability to customise and tamper with android to such a high degree that will make me always stick with them over the ridiculously locked down iOS.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 13:40
I agree with the comment about Kies on Samsung Galaxy phones - I will never have another Samsung while it relies on Kies for firmware upgrades, however well they are reviewed.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 13:45
6 of these and half a dozen of the other. Really I think we are splitting hairs here. I would like to add though that if I couldn't jailbreak my iPhone I wouldn't have one. A jailbroken iPhone is unmatched but with that said, if jailbreaking were not possible I would have an SIII. Android let's you customize and iPhone does not. Everyone likes customizing their phone to work best for them and show their personality by design. Not sure I want a phone that big though but I am slowly warming up to it.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 13:53
David Pert
In the S3 you can have 2 batteries and replace them. So batterie life is better in S3 because you can buy another one and replace them.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 13:55
Can we go nerd status and get a vanilla android UI added. Nothing tops the google experience IMO.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 14:44
I love how Iphone users point out the design of a phone as such a vital thing. Most people I know buy a case and cover up any phone they have immediately. I loved the look of my samsung captivate, but as soon as I bought it I put a case on it, so I couldn't see anything. Every one of my friends who has an iphone has a case on it. I personally think that these companies should spend some time making really awesome looking cases that go with their phones.
Tim Dupnak 26 September, 2012 15:04
All is nice with these phones, but when will we see a transporter beam and death ray installed?
anonymous 26 September, 2012 15:38
for all of you who state that he said you can't attach in the email app on iphone here is a quote from this very article
" iOS 6 has finally brought the ability to let you attach photos or videos into an email -- you press and hold in the email body, hit the arrow and select attach from the menu that appears."
anonymous 26 September, 2012 15:52
A few comments for those who mentioned the S3. You do not need Kies on your PC to update the firmware with the S3, you can download it over the the air straight to the device.I don't know if this is just on the S3 or on the ICS 4.04 update. Also, the first thing I did was get rid of the fugly touchwizz U.I., and download Go launcher EX from the playstore. I had the same on my S2. Samsung did put some great features on the S3 though. They adapted face unlock, took create smart stay, so the phone knows when you're looking at the screen and it won't turn of when you are looking at it but, in the same respect, it does goes off if your eyes are closed for any length of time. Also, pop out video player so you can multitask is killer. In fact, I think multitasking should have been mentioned in the article. iOS multitasking is horrible... Android is fantastic at this...
anonymous 26 September, 2012 16:13
What about the Sony Xperia T?!?!?! You talk about non singing and dancing phones, so why not look at a dual core handset? And what about the screen and camera?
anonymous 26 September, 2012 16:39
Does the writer has all of the 3 phones or he just made it based on others phone review ?
Roberto Mora-Galvis 26 September, 2012 17:20
I bet S3 with darker background has longer battery life
anonymous 26 September, 2012 17:35
None! WebOS is the best smartphone OS on hte planet until HP killed it!
anonymous 26 September, 2012 17:52
Thing I keep hearing ad being a benefit to iPhone is the ease of use against the 'nerdy' ability of android to fiddle with settings and change its appearance. No one ever points out that if you don't want to do all that fiddling you don't have to. Leave things alone and you'll end up with home screens full of app icons, just like an iPhone. Seems with android you can just choose.
Tylor Pater 26 September, 2012 17:56
I prefer the Windows Phone interface.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 19:01
How long will people cling to the 'it's so simple' rhetoric? Surely we've all had smartphones long enough now to cope with a bit more choice in way of options? Are people really that retarded that the most important thing for them is that they don't get confused with too many options? I can understand Joe Public, most ladies and non-tech type people but I'm always surprised this seems to sway readers/contributors to this sort of site so much.
Anyway, Android's really getting to the point now where it is almost as slick and usable as iOS. Set up correctly, an Android phone will be easier to use with more of the essential functions close to hand than on iOS. It's just the setting up. But that's where we are...there's plenty of retards who would rather pay twice as much for half as much so long as they don't have to bother learning how to set anything up.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 19:07
I have had an android HTC Evo for two years. I recently spent a day reading on how to hack it to Flash a ROm and hoped everything worked out. The only reason I did this was to get ICS and have things run a little faster and better. Why should I have to do this? Androids OS is too splintered and I don't want to be caught with a phone that is barely two years old that may or may not get the latest OS. Samsung is notorious for dropping support on older products and not updating them. Two Samsung TV's and a Tablet have proven that. Things may get better with updates but after buying a crappy Galaxy 10.1 tablet that wasnt crappy until I was given a Ipad and saw how things are supposed to run. Should I have to hack my phone to get it to run better. NO! I want something that I can use easily and get things done. Does it really impress anyone that I can add a different ROM that makes different widgets or backgrounds. NO! Big Whoop. Every widget I have installed ended up getting deleted for some reason. It slows it down anyway with too many widgets. So I cant wait to get an Iphone where I don 't have to waste my time and actually just use it for all the things I want to do. ROM this, Flash that, Widget this. Take that crap and toss it in the trash. and Windows 8. Yikes. Looks too Fisher Price for me.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 19:24
And yes WebOS was the best. Too bad HP didn't create Hardware that was just as awesome. I have used all the Phone OS's except Windows 8 although I have run it on one of my computers. WebOS was true multi tasking and had great potential. I would take my Pre back over most other phones if they were still creating new and better hardware. That leaves the Iphone which is great but still wasnt better than my Pre. Really miss that card style multi taking. Now if Android, Apple, or Microsoft integrated parts of WebOS that would be the killer product.
anonymous 26 September, 2012 19:41
Google nexus stock android kicks serious arse
anonymous 30 September, 2012 04:55
Not one mention of security issues with Droid vs. Apple.
anonymous 30 September, 2012 13:53
The article seems to posit iOS simplicity vs. Android features. Except that iOS simplicity is nonsense.
Setting up the basic functions on either phone (calls, texts, emails) is easy. Setting up additional stuff on the iPhone means adding credit card details to your apple store account, downloading and installing everyday apps like facebook and twitter, and then logging in.
Compare this to Android, where these apps nearly always come preinstalled and are normally already on your screen as widgets, and the simplicity argument becomes a joke.
anonymous 30 September, 2012 17:11
I go with the HTC, and the HTC Sense interface. But for me, the biggest thing is not the interface, but the connectivity to the computer, and the hands down winner is the iPhone (which I truly loathe) but iTunes connectivity works every time, and is very simple, maybe too simple. I am a fan of HTC, but HTC sync, while a step up from anything that vanilla Android offers, is still slow and ropey, taking ages to start up, ages to find the phone, then ages to sync. But you can explore the phone and install local apps, which is more than iTunes offers.
For me the choice between the two Android phones is simple... S3 longer battery life/cheap plastic build, HTC One X less battery/far beter build quality. I personally don't mind plugging my phone in to charge every day... Sorry Samsung, but your nasty plastic tat is not for me, no matter how good the components within are, HTC just build a better phone., but any Android is better thant he V-tech toy phone Apple make.
anonymous 1 October, 2012 17:15
If you talk about interface. You can't ignore Windows phone any more. Windows is the winner. Also the reason being plastic on some phones eg S3 is to do with signal issue as it has a better signal than iPhone. Let's not forget iPhone is the wrost in this aspect.
For me windows the winner!
anonymous 1 October, 2012 18:23
You also should note that the S3 can bulk upload photos to facebook or anywhere else - it isn't restricted to just one photo as per the suggestion in your article.
Other than that I find it a very good article showing off the 3 top phones and how similar they really are, even if tone in your commentary doesn't suggest it.
Andrew Sparkes 3 October, 2012 15:08
"But if you need just a small selection of core apps to flick between, without the bells and whistles of live tiles, then iOS may be the choice for you."
Uh no?
With the iPhone, I'm forced to have a list of all my apps, however much/little I use them.With an Android - while still retaining the full list by pressing the home button - I can drop ONLY the 5/6 apps I use most onto the home screen without any other tiles or widgets.
So, actually, my Android homescreen is a LOT more streamlined than my friends' iPhones', because they have all their apps in their face whether they want them there or not. I just have six icons: Phone, SMS, Email, Twitter, Maps, Chrome. That's it. If I swipe left/right, nothing else appears. The only thing I can do from the homescreen is select one of six apps. That is, by definition, more streamlined than rows and pages of icons that never actually disappear regardless of how much you use them.
Yes, you can stick not-used-much ones into folders, but with an Android, it's passive (to only drop a few only on a homescreen) and you only actively select the few you WANT displayed, rather than the many you don't (dropping them into a 'Not used much' folder on iOS - which still messily appears on the homescreen anyway!).
Disclaimer: I am not an Apple hater. I own Apple tech. I like Apple tech. I simply think this point is objectively wrong in that iOS is more streamlined. Yes, it's 'simpler', but don't confused simple for streamlined: a pushbike is simple, a Ferrari is streamlined.
anonymous 4 October, 2012 23:15
Iam a taxi driver,and i am an Apple's lover.
For the last 2 years ive been using iphone 4's google map to get a lots of places, resturants, pubs,shops and even roads that are not in my tomtom satnav....
All great untill i upgrated to ios6!!!!
This is just rubish!!! The map dosen't know about 1000's of pubs, roads that use to appear on 5.1.1 are not in the map,
And to be honest iam a bit tired of " cant do this, not suport that, not compatible, cant downgrade, cant connect to others via bluetooth, and for the best now no Google Maps or Youtube anymore!!!!
What the hell is Apple doing, Apple should have started his own map from the first day to be better by now improving day to day, but how can they do it on the ios6????
Or at least they should give the option to downgrade as many would be hapy to stick with the ios5.1.1.
Apple has gone too far this time in his own interest but iam sure its gonna be an affect on it.
Iam sireously thinkin in the S3 or Htc.
anonymous 22 October, 2012 23:49
iPhone 5 has a dual core Processor which u cannot customize to be at optimum speed and has no option for additional memory. S3 has a quad core processor and external sd memory which can also be customized to use for extra ram, makes the phone a much faster & smoother Experience. Apple say that the ios6 being seamless makes it run as fast as the s3, but with options to delete, cache, history, customize Battery management and system optimization The s3 is far more capable to run at full speed. Which is simply double the Iphones capability.
Not sure about the One X but many of my freinds who have had htc have sold up to apple or samsung. So must say something.
anonymous 22 October, 2012 23:56
also the s3 is not made of plastic. Search google its polycarbonate munch fancier hahah
anonymous 24 October, 2012 15:43
right for starters the interface on iPhones is terrible... same design 7 times over. people say you can change it when you jailbreak it and that it makes iPhones so much better than android. they are wrong. android not only has hardware diversity and a custom interface, but you can root it and put your own roms on it. way better than jailbreaking because all that really does is put cydia on it. root lets you overclock, custom it to anything you like by cooking your own roms and add in a ridiculous amount of things to your own custom OS. apple fanboys disgust me. its the same phone with the same interface with the same QuickTime and bloody iTunes. you want a good phone? go android. you don't have to root to make it a good phone either. the stock phones still outdo apple in every way.
horia747 6 November, 2012 16:59
Samsung's UI design makes me want to vomit (as do most of their product designs). It is impractical and they have made android look cheap and terrible when nowadays the stock android UI looks amazing. HTC however have done a great job with the UI by making improvements that make android more user friendly while retaining, if not adding, to its premium feel, simplicity, and elegant design. The iPhone is another piece of over priced s*** with-in Apple's brushed aluminum toilet.
anonymous 12 November, 2012 11:41
@ anonymous 26 September, 2012 14:44
or even better; design a phone that doesn't need a case?
anonymous 9 December, 2012 10:01
Fyi, refreshing the htc email inbox requires just two clicks! You should check your facts out before publishing.
anonymous 8 January, 2013 15:11
My father got an iphone with his work. He hated it. He ended up leaving the company (not because of the phone) and had to hand it back. I gave him my HTC Legend and he loved it. He is now a massive android fan boy. I got a one x and gave him my Sensation XL and still no complaints. I have an iPad and so i have experience with iOS and I can say that it sucks. Android for the win. I love HTC Sense and thats why I buy HTC. Little anoid that the took away the physical menu button on the One X but then again its better than having one button that only goes to your home screen hint hint.