• @souma@lemmy.world
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    22 years ago

    People buy iPhone because they’re consistent, polished, and just work. I love my Pixel, but glitches pop up more often than they should for a $1k phone. I don’t think I’d ever return to Apple, but sometimes the temptation shows up when they get a feature (admittedly late) but the implementation and function just plain works.

      • Kerrigor
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        22 years ago

        Hahahaha

        Sticking one’s head in the sand and pretending security is a non-issue is not actually more secure

        • @WiildFiire@lemmy.world
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          12 years ago

          If you can’t admit security is better through IOS then you’re the one sticking your head in the sand, tbh

          • Kerrigor
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            22 years ago

            Security on Android, as an OS, is arguably better. However in practice it’s very manufacturer-dependent. If they didn’t butcher the OS, and actually rolled updates without carriers getting in the way, it wouldn’t be a contest at all.

            • @Quentinp@lemmy.ca
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              12 years ago

              " If they didn’t butcher the OS, and actually rolled updates without carriers getting in the way, it wouldn’t be a contest at all." but they did though.

        • @Quentinp@lemmy.ca
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          12 years ago

          Huh?

          Unfortunately for Android users, Google researchers discovered known vulnerabilities, or n-days, that essentially equated to zero-days for Android due to a lack of timely patching issues. The vendor observed that attackers didn’t need zero-day exploits to attack the Android ecosystem because in many cases, patches weren’t available for known flaws, which were then exploited on unpatched devices.