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It's great that there are 3 official Holo themes: light, dark, hybrid.
It really sucks donkey balls that end-users are not able to select which theme they want to use (preferably, system-wide) . And it sucks gasoline-soaked donkey balls that Google's own apps don't let you select the theme.
For example, Google Reader comes in Holo Light only. Google Mail comes in Holo Light only. Who wants to read black text on white screen, especially at night?
Holo is nice. But it would be better if the theming were selectable.
Maybe I'm missing something but I think calling this interface Holo is a stretch. For example the non-Holo grid list in screen 2 ("browse shows"), scrollable tabs, incorrectly sized top bar, incorrect spacing between elements, and the odd frame around detail view in screen 4.
Don't get me wrong, it's still a decent looking application. But, it would look much cleaner looking if they wouldn't have deviated on such standard elements.
Apparently a huge amount of the reason that iOS development is quicker than Android development is DRM and video codec support. With iOS this is really convenient, whereas with Android there are several different types of hardware out there with various levels of support.
The hardware is probably a reason why Android 4.x still hasn't gained traction: The older phone simply cannot support the new Android. Hopefully this will change in the next year or so, when even cheap smartphones are Jelly-bean capable.
I believe a second part is of iOS being what I'm calling a "designer's ghetto". All the guys who loved Flash and couldn't do proper web design left and went to iOS, where they're all there making visually pretty but inconsistent and stupid experimental UIs. Android works a lot like the web, where you don't control the exact layout of your app, rather the general "vibe" of it. Smart designers are going to be able to thrive in this environment. Unfortunately, the tooling still isn't up to scratch.
Hopefully when designers actually get off their arse and start designing as opposed to crapping on about how important their job is, we'll end up with better apps eventually.



