Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 14th Jul 2012 00:04 UTC
In the News A fascinating difference in smartphone buying behaviour got highlighted today. In the US, Apple has double the market share of its nearest competitor, Samsung. However, in The Netherlands, the swamp I call home, the situation is completely reversed; Apple sits at 10% of the smartphone market, Samsung at 19.6%. Is this indicative of Europe as a whole? Could German, French, Polish, British, Spanish, Italian, etc. readers give local information from their own countries? I'm intrigued.
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RE[4]: A question of price.
by gan17 on Sat 14th Jul 2012 20:02 UTC in reply to "RE[3]: A question of price."
gan17
Member since:
2008-06-03

Android and iOS are good enough - iOS by no means has any serious advantages anymore.

For most people, this is probably the case. iOS still has some advantages (audio applications, easier to learn, perceived security advantage), and I'm sure Android does as well.


Normal people don't give a rat's ass about what software their phones run.

True. Most people usually just get what the store reps or friends recommend them, working around a budget.


It absolutely baffles me how people still beat the "Android only wins because it's cheap"-argument when the most popular Android phones are virtually always as expensive as.

Well, the only way we can be sure is to get a sales comparison of high-end Android phones vs the current iPhone (eg: Samsung Gal SIII/Note/Nexus vs iPhone 4s).

Fwiw, over here (S'pore), Android and Apple handsets seem to be priced similarly. My telco offers an iPhone 4S 16GB or Galaxy SIII for exactly the same deal; SG$98 x 24months - $0 for phone up-front, 12GB Data, 500 free SMS, 700 free minutes talk-time. But in neighboring places like Malaysia or Bali, the 4S commands a significant "up-front" premium over an equivalent Samsung, despite the plan rates and data limits being almost identical.

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