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Apple app store vs Google play store
What do you think which is better play store for andriod or app store for iphone?
Apple's App Store continues to generate more revenue than Google's Play Store for developers. Another thing for potential developers to consider is that if you want to write an iOS app then you need a Mac, whereas Android apps can be written on Windows, OS X and Linux.
Comments
Share apps is more complicated on Google world. And as far I know, you can send apps as a gift. You can send a code for a Google card and redeem it, but it doesn't work with particular apps.
Google Play is bigger but I think the content (the apps I'm interested on) are worse. Just my opinion. And I've found easier get apps for sale and even for free on Apple environment.
Having played with both extensively, I'm now almost exclusively an App Store man. Swapping to IOS was the best thing ever to happen to my music making ambitions. What is available for music makers using Android can't hold a candle to the many wonderful apps we have available for the iPad.
Publishing to Google Play is an order of magnitude less annoying than working with the App Store. (Though to be honest, Apple has improved recently).
However, my app is free. If I was actually concerned about making money, I gather things are a bit grim on the Android side. (And if you're making a music app, the latency issues on Android have always been a show-stopper, though I haven't stayed on top of possible improvements in the latest version).
Besides the latency
the trouble with android is that users are not on the latest version of the os
and are using a multitude of different hardware ...
Malware ...
And users want to spend even less money on software
Android is just everywhere because it's on every freaking cheap phone
This has nothing to do with popularity
Yada yada
Apple ecosystem has it flaws but seams to work very well for users and developers.
Just have a look at all the obsessed ppl here.
What I like about Google Play (from a developer's point of view): they have a one time entry fee of $25 (compared to $100 per year if you want to sell at Apple's App store), there's no review process at all - you just publish and let users decide if it's good or bad for them , and, which is more important for me, if you don't want to display your real name/address you don't need to register a company. One day, without a warning, Apple deleted all aliases, trade names, etc and started showing people's real info. Since then I've heard some shocking stories about the users bullying some developers on Facebook and other social media sites
What I don't like about Android: 1) users don't like spending money (some call my $3 app, that they use every day, expensive), 2) Java is ok but the Android SDK is a mess and it's getting worse, and 3) designing good looking apps, especially universal ones, is real hard. I usually spend 20% of my time on writing code and the the remaining 80% - on designing the UI and googling how to make it work the way I want it to work and to get rid of the bugs. That whole concept of defining your UI via XML drives me crazy to a point of 'never again'
malware la ola &_&
no wonder ppl don't want to buy stuff there
Well, as a user, I fully agree that the review process is very important.
As a developer, I don't like it at all You make a serious bug and half of your loyal users rush to the App store to leave a one star review. It's very important to publish an update ASAP but that review process stands in your way... Good thing is that Apple is really improving in this area
Also, I don't think it's the risk of getting malware that stops people from buying apps. I think 80% of Android users bought an android phone because it was much cheaper, and these individuals don't like paying for software and it's totally understandable (they either don't see a point because there are hundreds of free, quality apps from hobbyists and big corporations like Google, or they come from third world countries and it's really expensive for them to buy apps).
The other 20% are apple haters or those who really like android and who buy expensive android phones and don't mind paying for good, useful apps.
FWIW, I bought my Android phone, a mid range Hauwei, because it serves my needs. All I want from a phone is calls, texts, note taking, camera and the ability to upload to my local network via wi-fi. Also, I make so few calls and send so few texts, that a contract phone of any kind costs way more than I'd ever use. Obviously, an iPhone - especially without contract - is complete overkill for people like me.
However, while not adverse to freebies or cheap software when it works, I bought quite a lot of mid priced apps back when I had an Android tablet. What really put me off was that many Android developers seemed interested only in making a fast buck, and were not very keen to keep developing/ updating apps. So I'd regularly find apps that had got off to a great start, then left to dangle. I'm not saying that doesn't happen here on IOS - anyone remember Skram - but my experience has been overwhelmingly that IOS developers do care, are responsive and are mostly worth supporting.
Similar here, I've had android phones for years, as an iPhone is just far too expensive for a phone, as I only need to call my wife, once or twice a week, and similarly rarely ever receive a phone call from anyone but my wife.
I had a Sony Ericsson W800i as my walkman for ages while everyone else went to smartphones, and eventually went to an android phone and have been there ever since (the W800i is still running fine, here, with a Giffgaff sim in it, for no real reason, but it lasts a week on a charge).
Recently this summer I've undergone a lot of changes (got rid of a lot (a lot) of my stuff, needed the money, and in doing so, also exchanged against fewer but more modern secondhand items to get me by). Now I have a Nexus 6P running android 7 and for the first time I'm using my phone as a focal point when I'm out (now it's big enough to see things on).
For the past year or so we've also had a Nexus Player on our telly, and the Google Android TV play store is quite different from the normal phone play store. There's almost nothing of use on it. After trying a bunch of free apps, I've deleted all of them except Youtube and Kodi as that's all we ever use it for after all. It's easier for us to use than a Raspberry Pi for this situation, though.
We've never spent any money on android apps, as in the early days, they didn't seem trustworthy. This impression must've persisted, as we've still only ever loaded free apps (most of which never get used).
I've had a brief exposure to Windows phone and from what I can see, their app store is absolutely full of fake apps. They seem to do nothing whatsoever to prevent any untrustworthy app manufacturer anywhere from making an app that (for example) is called 'YouTube' and has the YouTube logo as the app icon, and yet it isn't actually it. This is highly untrustworthy, and that's where it ended.
I own 2 Ipads, a mac book and a new touch screen windows pc.
And a high end android phone.
I like using different things, different os etc.
Some do bits better than others, yada yada
Android is great, i had a 6+, saw the iPhone 7, and thought - boring.
I use my phone as a phone, not a mobile studio. It took a few days to get used to the idea, as android is years behind on the music front.
But now I am gonna stick with android as phone and Ipad for music.
Works for me.
And I agree, if it's in the app store it's 99% save.
If it's in the play store, well let's just say I choose wisely.........
But there is a world where apple and android live happy together. Or is it just my house..
I also have an ipad and an android phone too. Never owned an iphone. I will probably buy iphone SE next, don't wanna another android phone
My biggest complaint is that my current sony xperia became very slow and unresponsive. Which is really weird. Usually, Apple's devices become slow after 2-3 major iOS upgrades, and I'm 100% sure they do it on purpose to make people buy new devices. My android phone is still on 4.1, upgraded from 4.0 2-3 years ago, worked really great at the beginning but now became slow as hell. Can't really explain it
iPhone (7), HTC android phone (m8), two Lumia windows phone (535, 650). The iOS App Store it's the best of all, there's not much to say about that.
I think people underestimate the current state of android audio latency, On my phone with android 6 it's near flawless, that doesn't mean everything it's alright for music apps to flourish, a lot of factors also contribute.
Also people underestimate the current state of the windows Store, of course... if you are talking music apps it's a dead zone (there's a few hidden gems). But for non muscicians, all the apps they need are there and if there are no official apps there's always trusthworthy third party apps, just have to be careful.
I don't believe apple it's making devices slower on purpose.