The Official Cellphone Thread

HTC one vs S4 vs Iphone 5 ???

  • HTC One

    Votes: 51 22.6%
  • Galaxie S4

    Votes: 101 44.7%
  • Iphone 5

    Votes: 74 32.7%

  • Total voters
    226
J'ai pris un HTC One et c'est vraiment la grosse coche au dessus.

juste le case qui est en alu fait une différence tellement énorme. Mon ancien était en plastique cheap. La qualité de l'écran, la fluidité et la rapidité y'a rien qui accote sa.

Pour les updates, on s'en caliss tu royalement ? xda dev sont là pour nous. Une fois que tu roules un firmware + kernel + launcher custom, tu en as pu besoin des updates de htc.

pour la caméra, je vois pas en quoi les images sont de médiocre qualité. Sa rivalise avec mon point and shoot.
 
plus jamais je vais aller avec apple!!! j'ai tellement eu de problème avec mon téléphone sans compter les applications qui prennent 100 ans à ouvrir et fonctionner !

En ce moment j'ai lu que certaines applications comme facebook qui nécéssite un plugin java pour fonctionner optimalement bien la majorité des apps n'était pas configuré avec le plugin java et seulement quelques applications comme safari rendait le tout plus rapide. Sérieusement pas juste pour cette raison là, mais Apple est rendu un gros fail, et en plus les updates se font tellement rare.

Ca sera rien de moin que le S4 pour moi, tout mes amis on des Note 2 et son entièrement satisfait, je vais aller avec le S4 qui se rapproche de beaucoup à ce portable.

En plus avec l'esti d'itunes pour syncer, ca cest une vraie merde, tes carréement lié avec ce programme de merde qui doit tjrs updater sa version chaque jour comme des gros colons, pis ta tellement de probleme de syncing, de perte de data et cest mal chié comme jamais.

Fuck apple!! bottom of the line !

Moindrement que t'As de l'intelligence tu vas te rendre compte que Apple cest de la GROSSE marde en canne!
 
Moi quand j'ai changé de phone j'ai même pas eu la nécessité de devoir plugger physiquement mon phone pour resynchroniser mes contacts et mes apps; j'ai rentré mon Gmail et mon mot de passe pis tout s'est transférer en-dedans de 5 minutes.

Pis lol @ transférer un contact 1 par 1, t'as des tonnes d'apps qui permettent de transférer les contacts des serveurs de iCloud à Android en l'espace de 3 secondes. Quasiment plus simple que de faire caca.

Mettre tes 300 contacts 1 par 1. C'est un problème d'ignorance et non un problème d'appareil. Ça se transfert rapidement en 1 seul coup mais tu as préféré abandonné pour rester dans la médiocrité.

mes contacts sont pas sur Gmail, depuis le Edge qu'ils ont été rentré dans mon iphone, fak sont sur mon backup Itunes... mais dans votre logique, j'ai le choix, soit je dois essayer de sync mes contacts avec mon gmail sur mon ordinateur pour ensuite les retransférer sur un nouveau telephone ou je dois téléchargé une app pour ensuite transferer mes contacts, au lieu de juste plugger pi de cliquer.

Crissement plus efficace vos méthodes.

to each their own, vous voulez un telephone avec des bon speaker (lol) pi 100 milliards de fonctions de personnalisation, moi j'veux juste un telephone qui repond à mes besoin sans gosser ni perdre mon temps.
 
screenshot2013052416571.png


mes contacts sont pas sur Gmail, depuis le Edge qu'ils ont été rentré dans mon iphone, fak sont sur mon backup Itunes... mais dans votre logique, j'ai le choix, soit je dois essayer de sync mes contacts avec mon gmail sur mon ordinateur pour ensuite les retransférer sur un nouveau telephone ou je dois téléchargé une app pour ensuite transferer mes contacts, au lieu de juste plugger pi de cliquer.

Crissement plus efficace vos méthodes.

to each their own, vous voulez un telephone avec des bon speaker (lol) pi 100 milliards de fonctions de personnalisation, moi j'veux juste un telephone qui repond à mes besoin sans gosser ni perdre mon temps.
 
mes contacts sont pas sur Gmail, depuis le Edge qu'ils ont été rentré dans mon iphone, fak sont sur mon backup Itunes... mais dans votre logique, j'ai le choix, soit je dois essayer de sync mes contacts avec mon gmail sur mon ordinateur pour ensuite les retransférer sur un nouveau telephone ou je dois téléchargé une app pour ensuite transferer mes contacts, au lieu de juste plugger pi de cliquer.

Crissement plus efficace vos méthodes.

to each their own, vous voulez un telephone avec des bon speaker (lol) pi 100 milliards de fonctions de personnalisation, moi j'veux juste un telephone qui repond à mes besoin sans gosser ni perdre mon temps.

Hahahaha

Comme si syncer des contacts demandait un si grand effort. Tu parles comme si c'était le mont Everest à escalader alors que c'est encore plus simple que de syncer avec iTunes. Sérieux à t'entendre parler tu sors tout droit d'en-dessous d'une roche pis by the way Android est pas plus avancé juste à cause des features de personnalisations lol

C'est très drôle à te lire
 
Every time I try an android I find it needlessly complicated. I'm able to do everything on it, but it always takes a few extra steps and more time. With an iPhone, everything is just easy and quick and logical.

Why make it more complicated? :dunno:

Thanks for stating this without an example. Totally credible.

Please tell me of a 4 year old android phone that's equivalent to an iPhone 5.
Easily, the Samsung Galaxy S i9000.
Not better on the hardware, but is on what the software can do.

So to elaborate why I said earlier "iPhones are years behind". Here is what it is possible to do on Android that iPhones cannot as far as I know:

- I can select a default browser, it shows when you open a hyperlink from another application like Reddit or Gmail. On iOS, Safari opens all the time.
-- Same goes for any application (default mp3 player, video player, text editor)
- On a browser, you can select the text and open a Maps application like Google Maps or Waze.
- You can share anything to any other application if is installed on your phone.
- You can install apps from the Google Play Store web page. (side loading)
- The UI standard for apps on Android has started to define itself since ICS. iOS apps seems not to : The back button is never at the same place.
- No real multi-tasking. (If it slows down your phone, it's your fault you know)
- You can see all your files with a file explorer. See Solid Explorer, which offers a split screen where you have 2 file explorers... great for copying or moving.
- You can drag and drop your music or whatever file you want in your phone.
- You can easily assign a new ringtone.

- Apps you buy on an Android phone means it is available to download for tablets.
-- On iOS, it's 2 separate apps. See Angry Birds Space.
- You can play emulators with a bluetooth controller.
- Anti-theft apps : Cerberus offers a powerful dashboard that lets you do ANYTHING to your phone if stolen.
-- Plus, if your phone is rooted, you can install Cerberus as a system app, meaning it will not go away if the thief factory resets the phone.
- You can install the keyboard you want. Get features like swipe typing and improved word prediction
-- Swift Key can support two languages at once. Works great for Frenglish here in Quebec.
- Wireless charging
- Notifications in Android are great to use. On iOS, they disappear.
-- Plus, some phones has a notification light. You can change the color, pulse rate, speed of a light notification depending of the app. See the app LightFlow.

- Contacts application on Android is way more richer than iOS's. No social integration at all.
- You can manage your phone from a computer with Air Droid. You can send SMS from your PC.
- You can share anything with NFC by touching phones. NFC is not new, it was available in 2.3.
- Photosphere (Take Google Street View like photos).
- On several occurences, iOS apps offer less features than the Android version (see Dropbox, Yelp).
-- Dropbox : You cannot edit text files on iOS. You cannot upload any type of files.
- iOS cannot download attachments of certain type of files (mp3, zip).
- If you ever feel doing a factory reset, you can backup your apps (plus their data) before. See Helium Backup.
-- You can also backup the whole phone if you want. (Requires root)
- You can see what permissions applications use on their page on the Google Play Store
-- You can manually allow or deny permissions to apps. See LBE Privacy Guard.
- When an application crashes, you get a message. On iOS, it brings you back to the home screen.
- When the keyboard is in lower case, the letters displayed are still in upper case.

- You can create profile that triggers by an event, and run tasks with it. See the app "Tasker"
-- This app can be one topic itself, because of the possibilities...
-- Exemple of profiles :
--- When connected to home wi-fi : disables the lockscreen, sets ringtone volume to loud, reduces brightness.
--- When leaving home : enables bluetooth
--- When connected to car bluetooth : auto-start playing music for audio streaming
--- When opening Google Maps, turn on GPS
--- When at work, mute the phone and set it to vibrate

iOS is a very strict operating system, it doesn't let you do much and doesn't tell you much what's happening (like an app crashes, you don't know why).
The more restrictions, the less secure it is.

Here are examples of past security issues :

On iOS 5.1 : http://www.theverge.com/2012/3/22/2894135/apple-safari-url-spoof-exploit-ios
On iOS 6.1.3 : http://www.theverge.com/2013/3/20/4129084/another-iphone-lock-screen-exploit-discovered-ios-6-1-3


To make your phone more secure on Android, root it and use a permission manager app like SuperUser.
 
^^ you sir



You



You deserve a medal

I copy/paste your post into my notepad, whenever I get the chance to know a bit more I'll take a read again

Downloaded Lightflow and I'm about to download Tasker because it is simply an amazing app that I was looking for

By the I am running BatteryGuru to save up the maximum battery, does Tasker take a lot of RAM ?
 
Pour ceux qui aiment les gros telephones... vous pensez quoi du galaxy mega?

galaxy-mega-6.3-vs-mega-5.8-vs-htc-one-vs-nokia-920-vs-iphone-5.jpg


Samsung-Galaxy-Player-58-05.jpg



ca commence a être gros en tabarnack ca..
 
pour la caméra, je vois pas en quoi les images sont de médiocre qualité. Sa rivalise avec mon point and shoot.

Le monde ont peur des chiffres (4mpx) mais ca c'est juste la dimension de l'image! La qualité est excellente. J'ai aussi entendu de bon commentaires face au speakers..

Le One est dans mes favoris pour remplacer mon galaxy nexus.
 
Thanks for stating this without an example. Totally credible.


Easily, the Samsung Galaxy S i9000.
Not better on the hardware, but is on what the software can do.

So to elaborate why I said earlier "iPhones are years behind". Here is what it is possible to do on Android that iPhones cannot as far as I know:

- I can select a default browser, it shows when you open a hyperlink from another application like Reddit or Gmail. On iOS, Safari opens all the time.
-- Same goes for any application (default mp3 player, video player, text editor)
- On a browser, you can select the text and open a Maps application like Google Maps or Waze.
- You can share anything to any other application if is installed on your phone.
- You can install apps from the Google Play Store web page. (side loading)
- The UI standard for apps on Android has started to define itself since ICS. iOS apps seems not to : The back button is never at the same place.
- No real multi-tasking. (If it slows down your phone, it's your fault you know)
- You can see all your files with a file explorer. See Solid Explorer, which offers a split screen where you have 2 file explorers... great for copying or moving.
- You can drag and drop your music or whatever file you want in your phone.
- You can easily assign a new ringtone.

- Apps you buy on an Android phone means it is available to download for tablets.
-- On iOS, it's 2 separate apps. See Angry Birds Space.
- You can play emulators with a bluetooth controller.
- Anti-theft apps : Cerberus offers a powerful dashboard that lets you do ANYTHING to your phone if stolen.
-- Plus, if your phone is rooted, you can install Cerberus as a system app, meaning it will not go away if the thief factory resets the phone.
- You can install the keyboard you want. Get features like swipe typing and improved word prediction
-- Swift Key can support two languages at once. Works great for Frenglish here in Quebec.
- Wireless charging
- Notifications in Android are great to use. On iOS, they disappear.
-- Plus, some phones has a notification light. You can change the color, pulse rate, speed of a light notification depending of the app. See the app LightFlow.

- Contacts application on Android is way more richer than iOS's. No social integration at all.
- You can manage your phone from a computer with Air Droid. You can send SMS from your PC.
- You can share anything with NFC by touching phones. NFC is not new, it was available in 2.3.
- Photosphere (Take Google Street View like photos).
- On several occurences, iOS apps offer less features than the Android version (see Dropbox, Yelp).
-- Dropbox : You cannot edit text files on iOS. You cannot upload any type of files.
- iOS cannot download attachments of certain type of files (mp3, zip).
- If you ever feel doing a factory reset, you can backup your apps (plus their data) before. See Helium Backup.
-- You can also backup the whole phone if you want. (Requires root)
- You can see what permissions applications use on their page on the Google Play Store
-- You can manually allow or deny permissions to apps. See LBE Privacy Guard.
- When an application crashes, you get a message. On iOS, it brings you back to the home screen.
- When the keyboard is in lower case, the letters displayed are still in upper case.

- You can create profile that triggers by an event, and run tasks with it. See the app "Tasker"
-- This app can be one topic itself, because of the possibilities...
-- Exemple of profiles :
--- When connected to home wi-fi : disables the lockscreen, sets ringtone volume to loud, reduces brightness.
--- When leaving home : enables bluetooth
--- When connected to car bluetooth : auto-start playing music for audio streaming
--- When opening Google Maps, turn on GPS
--- When at work, mute the phone and set it to vibrate

iOS is a very strict operating system, it doesn't let you do much and doesn't tell you much what's happening (like an app crashes, you don't know why).
The more restrictions, the less secure it is.

Here are examples of past security issues :

On iOS 5.1 : http://www.theverge.com/2012/3/22/2894135/apple-safari-url-spoof-exploit-ios
On iOS 6.1.3 : http://www.theverge.com/2013/3/20/4129084/another-iphone-lock-screen-exploit-discovered-ios-6-1-3


To make your phone more secure on Android, root it and use a permission manager app like SuperUser.


tell me about how you do all this shit on a daily basis and it's essential to your well being.
 
I use most of that stuff almost everyday. the interface is so much easier to do what you want and theres so much more you can do.

disagree with the interface part, but agree with more possibilities, however, there just isn't much I want to do, or care to do for that matter.
 
Personally I find the iPhone very practical and easy to use.
It's very tough to go from an iPhone to an android or any other phone for that matter.

I've been able to ditch blackberrys and androids easily but it's hard to ditch an iPhone.
It's te only apple product I own but it's a very good one.
 
Thanks for stating this without an example. Totally credible.


Easily, the Samsung Galaxy S i9000.
Not better on the hardware, but is on what the software can do.

So to elaborate why I said earlier "iPhones are years behind". Here is what it is possible to do on Android that iPhones cannot as far as I know:

- I can select a default browser, it shows when you open a hyperlink from another application like Reddit or Gmail. On iOS, Safari opens all the time.
-- Same goes for any application (default mp3 player, video player, text editor)
- On a browser, you can select the text and open a Maps application like Google Maps or Waze.
- You can share anything to any other application if is installed on your phone.
- You can install apps from the Google Play Store web page. (side loading)
- The UI standard for apps on Android has started to define itself since ICS. iOS apps seems not to : The back button is never at the same place.
- No real multi-tasking. (If it slows down your phone, it's your fault you know)
- You can see all your files with a file explorer. See Solid Explorer, which offers a split screen where you have 2 file explorers... great for copying or moving.
- You can drag and drop your music or whatever file you want in your phone.
- You can easily assign a new ringtone.

- Apps you buy on an Android phone means it is available to download for tablets.
-- On iOS, it's 2 separate apps. See Angry Birds Space.
- You can play emulators with a bluetooth controller.
- Anti-theft apps : Cerberus offers a powerful dashboard that lets you do ANYTHING to your phone if stolen.
-- Plus, if your phone is rooted, you can install Cerberus as a system app, meaning it will not go away if the thief factory resets the phone.
- You can install the keyboard you want. Get features like swipe typing and improved word prediction
-- Swift Key can support two languages at once. Works great for Frenglish here in Quebec.
- Wireless charging
- Notifications in Android are great to use. On iOS, they disappear.
-- Plus, some phones has a notification light. You can change the color, pulse rate, speed of a light notification depending of the app. See the app LightFlow.

- Contacts application on Android is way more richer than iOS's. No social integration at all.
- You can manage your phone from a computer with Air Droid. You can send SMS from your PC.
- You can share anything with NFC by touching phones. NFC is not new, it was available in 2.3.
- Photosphere (Take Google Street View like photos).
- On several occurences, iOS apps offer less features than the Android version (see Dropbox, Yelp).
-- Dropbox : You cannot edit text files on iOS. You cannot upload any type of files.
- iOS cannot download attachments of certain type of files (mp3, zip).
- If you ever feel doing a factory reset, you can backup your apps (plus their data) before. See Helium Backup.
-- You can also backup the whole phone if you want. (Requires root)
- You can see what permissions applications use on their page on the Google Play Store
-- You can manually allow or deny permissions to apps. See LBE Privacy Guard.
- When an application crashes, you get a message. On iOS, it brings you back to the home screen.
- When the keyboard is in lower case, the letters displayed are still in upper case.

- You can create profile that triggers by an event, and run tasks with it. See the app "Tasker"
-- This app can be one topic itself, because of the possibilities...
-- Exemple of profiles :
--- When connected to home wi-fi : disables the lockscreen, sets ringtone volume to loud, reduces brightness.
--- When leaving home : enables bluetooth
--- When connected to car bluetooth : auto-start playing music for audio streaming
--- When opening Google Maps, turn on GPS
--- When at work, mute the phone and set it to vibrate

iOS is a very strict operating system, it doesn't let you do much and doesn't tell you much what's happening (like an app crashes, you don't know why).
The more restrictions, the less secure it is.

Here are examples of past security issues :

On iOS 5.1 : http://www.theverge.com/2012/3/22/2894135/apple-safari-url-spoof-exploit-ios
On iOS 6.1.3 : http://www.theverge.com/2013/3/20/4129084/another-iphone-lock-screen-exploit-discovered-ios-6-1-3


To make your phone more secure on Android, root it and use a permission manager app like SuperUser.

This is the single most bullshit I have ever read and I'm and Android user. You are a poor salesman and an Android fanboy. You will never convert Apple users to Android with this load of crap.
 
Ain't got time for all that nonsense, I just want to write emails and go on Wikipedia to settle drunken arguments and browse MR on tapatalk and watch YouTube videos and be able to play music from any bedside radio in any hotel I go to.
 
Ain't got time for all that nonsense, I just want to write emails and go on Wikipedia to settle drunken arguments and browse MR on tapatalk and watch YouTube videos and be able to play music from any bedside radio in any hotel I go to.

Stay with iPhone then
 
Pour ceux qui aiment les gros telephones... vous pensez quoi du galaxy mega?

ca commence a être gros en tabarnack ca..

C'est presque la grosseur d'un iPad Mini... un peu too much IMO.

I'd get a Note 2 or Note 3 tought, perfect size IMO.
 
I copy/paste your post into my notepad, whenever I get the chance to know a bit more I'll take a read again

Downloaded Lightflow and I'm about to download Tasker because it is simply an amazing app that I was looking for

By the I am running BatteryGuru to save up the maximum battery, does Tasker take a lot of RAM ?

I don't really use a "battery saving" app because I have no idea if they are good or not.

If you have 2Gb, you will no problem with Tasker.

This is the single most bullshit I have ever read and I'm and Android user. You are a poor salesman and an Android fanboy. You will never convert Apple users to Android with this load of crap.

So prove me then that 100% of the stuff I listed is false.

I don't care about "selling" or "converting" iPhone users. I sometimes help my colleagues when they have problems with their iPhones.
Android fanboy? More of a technology fanboy. I like the iPad.
 
Phones are getting as big as tablets, it's insane.

The S4 has a plastic casing and yeah it looks cheap, but it has some upsides against HTC One's casing.
Same goes with the HTC One, its upsides are the S4's downsides.

I hate the position of the back button on the S4.

What iPhone did you have?
 
Last edited:
Back
Top