@IRJ said:
@Dominica said:
For me, it's about the phone working, vs. not working. I and all the members of my family with Android phones had awful luck with them not working, not updating emails, not getting texts, etc. My iPhone 4s has been through hell, and it still works, I just finally broke it to the point where it doesn't charge while powered on, only while off, which is annoying, but it still works. I'm due for an upgrade, but I'm waiting for a 6 so that I have maximum time for iOS upgrades before it's obsolete.
Sure there is a small learning curve on Android phones, but we are technical and it isn't that difficult compared to troubleshooting Windows, Mac OS, or Linux operating systems.
In this day and age the simplicity argument doesn't hold as much water. Have you used Android KitKat? Its rather simple compared to Android 2.0. If you just want simplicity and dont care about features why not just get the Iphone 5c?
KitKat is super stable too. The Froyo and Gingerbread generation (Android 2.x) was not real stable. Honeycomb, or Android 3.0, brought about a huge boost in stability, and features. 4.0 was even better. Now we're on 4.4 and it's just rock solid.