i Phone loyalty just hit a new high with only 3.6% of i OS users thinking of switching — but here's why I'm never ditching Android | Tech Radar
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i Phone loyalty just hit a new high with only 3.6% of i OS users thinking of switching — but here's why I'm never ditching Android
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Fresh survey data from phone trade-in service Sell Cell (via Mac Rumors) suggests that i OS loyalty has hit a new high: 96.4% of i Phone owners are likely to stick with Apple handsets when they next upgrade, based on responses from over 5,000 people in the US.
That's up from 91.9% in 2021, and means that out of every 100 i Phone users, only 3 or 4 are considering what life might be like with an Android device. It seems i OS is much loved by its users — or at least they don't want the hassle of trying to extract themselves and their messages from i Message.
The Android figure is higher than ever too, by the way, though it's lower than Apple: 86.4% of Android users say they're likely to go with Android again when it's time to upgrade. By brand, it's 90.1% for Samsung and 86.8% for Google.
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Despite the lure of the best i Phones, and the increasing loyalty to the brand of i Phone users, I'm not thinking of moving away from Android — and I'll explain why below.
For context, I do own an i Phone too — it's part of the tech journalist job, having to write about both mobile platforms — but a Google Pixel is the phone I use day-to-day as my main device, while the Apple phone sits in a drawer until I specifically need it.
Per-label notifications in Gmail for Android (Image credit: Future)
For me, apps like Gmail, Google Maps, Google Docs, and Gemini are a long way ahead of their Apple Mail, Apple Maps, Apple Pages, and Siri counterparts — so it makes sense to choose a phone where these apps are most useful and most at home.
Yes, just about every Google app is available for i OS, but Apple doesn't give them the same freedom as they have on Android. You can't set Gemini as your default AI assistant on an i Phone, for example, or get notifications per label in Gmail like you can on Android.
Google apps are where I spend most of my mobile time, and so I want the best and most seamless Google app experience possible — which means an Android phone.
Android lets third-party apps do more (Image credit: Future)
It's fair to say Android and i OS are now closer than ever in many respects, and Apple has certainly made its mobile operating system more customizable in recent years. The gap in terms of tweaking the interface and setting default apps isn't as big as it used to be.
However, Android remains the more versatile OS, and gives its apps significantly more freedom than Apple does: something like Tasker simply cannot exist on i OS. Android apps can plug into notifications, accessibility options, the system clipboard and other fundamental parts of the software in a much deeper way than i Phone apps can.
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For example, Android lets third-party apps take over and manage SMS/RCS as your default messaging app — something you can't do on i OS. Then there are the third-party Android launchers, which completely transform the look of the software, and which Apple is unlikely to ever allow.
If you want to be able to do more with third-party apps and customize your phone to a greater extent (which I do), then Android is the best option by a significant margin.
Apple TV is one of the few Apple apps on Android (Image credit: Future)
You've most probably heard of Apple's walled garden, and while a few bricks have been removed in recent years — Apple TV for Android! — it's still pretty well closed off. The i Phone and its default apps remain a bit picky when it comes to the other devices and platforms they'll work with, and that's a problem for me.
Let's take photos and videos, which are a major part of the smartphone experience. Google Photos works effortlessly across Android devices, i Phones, Macs, Windows computers, and many other gadgets with screens. As someone who spends a lot of time swapping between platforms, I need to be able to take all my digital stuff with me.
Apple Photos, meanwhile, is a non-starter on Android and clunky on Windows. It uses a proprietary file system that's a pain for third-party services like Dropbox. Like many native i OS apps, it doesn't really play well with non-Apple devices.
For these reasons and others, I'm one of the 86.4% likely to stick with my Android phone when it's time to upgrade again. I do quite like i OS, when I use it, and it definitely has some advantages over Android too — but in terms of what I prioritize, it's Android all the way.
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Dave is a freelance tech journalist who has been writing about gadgets, apps and the web for more than two decades. Based out of Stockport, England, on Tech Radar you'll find him covering news, features and reviews, particularly for phones, tablets and wearables. Working to ensure our breaking news coverage is the best in the business over weekends, David also has bylines at Gizmodo, T3, Pop Sci and a few other places besides, as well as being many years editing the likes of PC Explorer and The Hardware Handbook.
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