Android sales are skewed when comparing to Apple based on the fact that Apple is relegated to one carrier and Droid is all over giving people different options.
For example, EVERYONE here in my town has Verizon. ATT is worthless here...completely. So everyone with a smartphone has a Droid or BB of some fashion (Moto, HTC I, Eris, etc).
If you released both phones into the open market I think you would see Apple regain any ground lost.
I can't count how many people own a Droid or Eris or something because they would rather have that than switch to ATT. But if you do a search to see just how many people would love to have the iPhone on Verizon....it would really hurt Droid. I bet my paycheck that if the iPhone was offered to Verizon it would be sold out for months and probably even outsell the iPad, Droid, and Incredible combined.
So I agree...if you want to judge a true phone to phone then the Droid of some fashion needs to knock off the iPhone with ONE device.
I doubt they're scared. They just surpassed the Microsoft Corporation in capitalization today at about 245 a share.
Android sales are skewed when comparing to Apple based on the fact that Apple is relegated to one carrier and Droid is all over giving people different options.
For example, EVERYONE here in my town has Verizon. ATT is worthless here...completely. So everyone with a smartphone has a Droid or BB of some fashion (Moto, HTC I, Eris, etc).
If you released both phones into the open market I think you would see Apple regain any ground lost.
I can't count how many people own a Droid or Eris or something because they would rather have that than switch to ATT. But if you do a search to see just how many people would love to have the iPhone on Verizon....it would really hurt Droid. I bet my paycheck that if the iPhone was offered to Verizon it would be sold out for months and probably even outsell the iPad, Droid, and Incredible combined.
So I agree...if you want to judge a true phone to phone then the Droid of some fashion needs to knock off the iPhone with ONE device.
People didn't deviate from the TRS-80, Micral N, Apple I, Apple II, 8086, 286, etc... They learned how to use them and the technology involved. In doing so more advanced, more powerful and easier to use technologies spawned from these very same people. Now that Apple has essentially created computing for idiots where is the desire to learn? The challenge and desire to improve that drove the industry to the point where it is at now. Don't get me wrong there are still those that love the challenge and strive to improve existing technologies. In doing so and essentially dumbing it down to the point of "button pushing" for the masses is it beneficial to future progress? Remember the masses are the ones that will some day be in the positions of those creating and improving said technology.
Ok, then even in the real world environment, where Apple has one carrier, one phone and Android has so many phones and carriers I've lost count, Apple is still ahead 2:1 in the US and 3.5:1 overall.Android sales are skewed when comparing to Apple based on the fact that Apple is relegated to one carrier and Droid is all over giving people different options.
For example, EVERYONE here in my town has Verizon. ATT is worthless here...completely. So everyone with a smartphone has a Droid or BB of some fashion (Moto, HTC I, Eris, etc).
If you released both phones into the open market I think you would see Apple regain any ground lost.
I can't count how many people own a Droid or Eris or something because they would rather have that than switch to ATT. But if you do a search to see just how many people would love to have the iPhone on Verizon....it would really hurt Droid. I bet my paycheck that if the iPhone was offered to Verizon it would be sold out for months and probably even outsell the iPad, Droid, and Incredible combined.
So I agree...if you want to judge a true phone to phone then the Droid of some fashion needs to knock off the iPhone with ONE device.
That's all nice and well, but what you're essentially doing is creating a controlled experiment. The real world isn't a controlled experiment. It's filled a never-ending amount of variables. For example, the town you're in. Some places AT&T is stronger, some places Verizon is stronger. You can't just magically make everything even across the board because you disagree with real world metrics.
True that many would want an iPhone on Verizon. But if it isn't available, then it isn't available. People move on and pick something else. If it happens to be an Android device, then fine. If they decide to jump to AT&T because they have to have the iPhone, then that's fine too.
All of these carrier issues and availability issues are part of the open market. No one is assigned a carrier and a device when they're born. We're free to move about between carriers and devices. Yes there are the contracts, but it's not a death sentence to break them.
Ok, then even in the real world environment, where Apple has one carrier, one phone and Android has so many phones and carriers I've lost count, Apple is still ahead 2:1 in the US and 3.5:1 overall.
And that's not a bad thing. You seem to think that the point of technology is for users to learn about technology. It isn't. It can also be a tool for other purposes, including learning about other things. A novelist or historian who uses technology to do their work shouldn't be expected to learn how the technology itself works. The fact that it makes them more productive in what they choose to do is a good thing.