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Android N in the news (10th March 2016) — any better for synths?
Android N is in the news today as a preview, not for the normal public. I wonder if this will be any better for music and synth apps now, and whether it’ll come close to competing with iOS?
Comments
Yeah I think it would be good to have some competition
I think that for me it's too late no matter how good it is. Far too many iOS apps to think about switching OS.
Only 3% of current Android devices are running the current Android version, far too few for developers to try and take advantage of any new features, and they need to resolve the input latency before it will be useable for synths etc...
It would be good to have android on par with iOS as the hardware is far cheaper and less restricted, as long as it had Link and StudioMux (or similar) I'd use one as a secondary device
competition ok but for what or who?Apple..? They couldn't care less about the 0,01% musicians on ios and i doubt that something would change.It would take years for android anyway to get there where iOS is now (app selection and technical progression).And i can imagine it's not many developers wet dream to release on android with all the device/OS fragmentation and the payment moral combined with very easy ways to pirate stuff...
As long as Android users aren't willing to pay for apps it doesn't matter if the underlying system is getting better technically. There's still massive fragmentation happening on Android which is another showstopper.
I read that the latency its a lot better (but it still was like 18ms for a 128 buffer size) depends on the device of course (the recomendation was a nexus device I think) so it looks like we are getting close to 2010 with android devices and audio, maybe the next version finally does it, of course latency it's solved on devices with Samsung professional audio and there are solutions like the one IK multimedia develop for amplitube.
After almost 8 years on Android, I think I will switch to iOS soon if that new 4" iphone will be reasonably priced. Just had enough of it. I'm not just a user but a developer too, and though I quite like Java and the new IDE is cool, I don't wanna do it anymore due to different reasons
What I like about iOS is that its latest version supports even older devices like the iPad 2. My 3 year old android phone can run only Android 4. I don't like changing phones every year in order to be able to run the latest version so I will probably ditch this platform.
Besides, it seems like no matter how powerful your new android phone is, it will become really slow in the next several months of use. Don't know why. This is what I've experienced myself and what others are complaining about
Btw, a week ago, its battery got swollen and the phone started looking like a pregnant lady had to disassemble it, it looked like it was going to explode